Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Syria: minority peoples face cleansing

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Syria: minority peoples face cleansing

    World War 4 Report
    Sept 7 2013


    Syria: minority peoples face cleansing

    Submitted by WW4 Report on Fri, 09/06/2013 - 18:21


    Syria's minority peoples are especially targeted by the jihadist
    rebels - and therefore generally wary of foreign intervention against
    the Bashar Assad regime. The Armenians, like other Syrian Christians,
    face growing attacks, with the US-based Armenian Weekly July 31
    reporting a wave of abductions and slayings, including of children, by
    unnamed rebel factions. Zarmik Poghikian of Aleppo-based Armenian
    journal Gandzasar told Radio Free Europe Aug. 31: "The Armenian
    community is neutral, but it is concerned, because this possible
    strike will be delivered against the whole country and everyone
    without exception will suffer. Leaders of the Armenian community have
    urged people to remain cautious during these days and refrain from
    attempting to leave the city, but even if someone wanted to do so
    there is no opportunity anymore, as all roads are closed."

    Syria's Armenians, numbering some 100,000, are mostly in Aleppo, many
    descended from survivors of the forced deportations from their
    Caucasus homeland by the Ottoman Turks during the World War I-era
    genocide. International Armenian news site Asbarez on Sept. 6 ran an
    editorial opposing US air-strikes on Syria, calling on readers to
    voice their opposition.

    Many of Syria's Circassians, another predominantly Christian people,
    have already fled the country. Sameer Qardan, a former English
    professor at Damascus University who now heads the office of the
    International Circassian Association in Nalchik, southern Russia
    (Kabardino-Balkaria Republic), is petitioning Moscow to allow Syria's
    100,000 Circassians to return to their ancient Caucasus homeland. He
    told Irish Times Aug. 22: "Syria is being destroyed by both sides. We
    are not with the regime - we want reforms in a nonviolent way. But with
    all its faults, the dictatorship is not as bad as the Islamists. They
    will never recognize the rights of anyone who does not share their
    beliefs."

    The Circassians fled their homeland in a wave of persecution and
    atrocities after its conquest by Russia in the 19th century, only to
    find themselves persecuted in Turkish-dominated lands as well,
    prompting many to flee to Syria and other Arab areas of the Ottoman
    empire. Qardan's family settled in the Golan Heights in 1899, and
    farmed there until the enclave was seized by Israel in 1967, and the
    family lost its land. They moved to Damascus and then to Kuwait, where
    they again lost their property when Iraq invaded in 1990, prompting
    them to return to Syria. "And now it is happening once more," he said.

    Also now being forced to flee a Syria that once provided refuge for
    them are the Mandaeans - followers of the world's last remaining
    indigenous Gnostic faith, nearly all 60,000 of whom have had to flee
    their homeland in Iraq over the past decade. While some have received
    asylum in Canada, Australia and elsewhere, many have remained in
    Syria, hoping to reconstitute the community and eventually return to
    Iraq. Now they may have to give up that dream, Canada's National Post
    reported Aug. 10. The Damascus suburb where they have settled,
    Jaramana, has suffered three bombings this year, leaving 10 dead and
    nearly 70 wounded - blamed by the government on "terrorists." In recent
    weeks, it has started to come under shelling by rebel forces.

    http://www.ww4report.com/node/12607


    From: Baghdasarian
Working...
X