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  • Christians Fleeing Kirkuk

    CHRISTIANS FLEEING KIRKUK

    Niqash.org
    Oct 22 2009
    Iraq

    With the deteriorating situation and unstable conditions in Kirkuk,
    Christians are considering fleeing the northern city where they have
    lived for decades.

    Farish Nzarit Gatalian, an Armenian Christian living in Kirkuk, says
    that "the lucky person is he who gets a [foreign] visa and leaves
    this city."

    Fifty-year-old Gatalian, sitting in front of a picture of Jesus in
    his home, says that he no longer feels safe in the city and that he
    fears for the future of himself and his family. "When I go to work
    I'm never sure whether I will return home alive or dead in a coffin,"
    he said, explaining his reason for wanting to leave.

    According to Gatalian, the plight of Iraqi Christians has becoming
    increasingly perilous and he told Niqash that most of his relatives
    have already fled the country. "During the past 40 years there were
    some 1000 Christian families from Armenian origin but now only 70
    families are left," he said, adding that Christians in Kirkuk have
    lost all hope of staying in their city.

    On the back of the tense political situation in Kirkuk over the status
    of the disputed territories, tensions between the city's four ethnic
    groups, Arabs, Kurds, Turkmens and Christians, have significantly
    worsened. Kirkuk's Christians live, for the most part, in Arafa,
    al-Mas and al-Masour neighbourhoods. Like other groups in the city,
    they say they live in a state of continuous struggle to preserve
    their religion and identity.

    Local Christians say that they are now targets of armed groups and
    tens of them have been killed and kidnapped, while their churches
    have been bombed.

    Two weeks ago, Imad, a young Christian man was abducted as he left his
    home heading to work at a local hospital. Two days later his dead body
    was discovered. Shortly before this incident, a Christian doctor was
    kidnapped and only released after the payment of a US $100,000 ransom.

    While in captivity the doctor was tortured.

    Imad Yuhanna Yaqo, a member of the Assyrian Democratic Movement (ADM),
    a Christian party, told Niqash that they had recorded "seven deaths
    and four kidnappings between April and September. This has led 20
    Christian families to flee Kirkuk and go to the Kurdistan Region or
    other countries like Syria and Jordan."

    Yaqo told Niqash that "the number of Christians in Kirkuk before the
    fall of the Baath regime was more than 20,000. This number has dropped
    to 10,000 and the number continues to decrease... Most of the emigrants
    have family members abroad with the financial means to assist them."

    Another ADM member explained the reasons behind the Christian flight
    from the city: "The deteriorating conditions, the uncertainties
    surrounding the future of Kirkuk, the dreadful conflict between Arabs
    and Kurds over the city, the increased violence practiced by Islamic
    parties and the weak influence of leftist and liberal parties are
    the reasons behind Christian emigration," he said.

    Today, those Christians that remain in the city are trying to assert
    greater influence by pushing their children to find jobs in government
    and security institutions. At the moment the proportion of Christians
    in these bodies is negligible compared to other groups.

    Salvana Boya is the only Christian in Kirkuk's provincial council
    for the Assyrian National Party and says that "there is only one seat
    for every 10,000 Christians in the city... Being the only Christian
    member among the 41 provincial council members, I feel that I lack
    the support I need," he said.

    But according to Boya, there is another problem facing Christians
    in Kirkuk: the small size of their families. "Late marriages among
    Christians and their reluctance to have big families are major
    challenges," he said. "One rarely finds a Christian family of five
    or six members."

    According to Boya, the issue is as important as any security or
    political challenge because it is contributes to the decrease in the
    number of Christians and threatens their existence.

    Even so, Yaqo believes that there is a larger region-side challenge
    facing Christians. "There is a conspiracy to empty the region of
    Christians," he said. "We are the weakest minority in the region and
    the first victims of these conflicts. Our numbers are very little
    and if we continue to emigrate at the same speed the region will very
    soon be empty of its Christians."
    From: Baghdasarian
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