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Islamic State Overruns Historic Christian Area In Syria, Abducts 90

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  • Islamic State Overruns Historic Christian Area In Syria, Abducts 90

    ISLAMIC STATE OVERRUNS HISTORIC CHRISTIAN AREA IN SYRIA, ABDUCTS 90

    Dalje.com , Croatia
    Feb 24 2015

    Islamic State extremists have abducted at least 90 Christians after
    storming villages in the historic heartland of the country's Assyrian
    minority, a monitoring group said Tuesday.

    Villagers fled the jihadist advance, launched early on Monday, to
    the cities of al-Hassakeh and Qamishli where they were sheltered by
    local churches.

    "There are dozens of families whose fate is still not known," one of
    the refugees, Shmouna Yunan, told dpa by phone from al-Hassakeh.

    "Terror is everywhere in our areas, the sound of bullets has been
    keeping our children awake."

    A local Assyrian militia which fights alongside Kurdish forces said
    they were trying to recapture villages along the Khabur river west
    of al-Hassakeh seized by the jihadists.

    A spokesman for the Syriac Military Council said it did not yet have
    an estimate for the number of people abducted. The Syrian Observatory
    for Human Rights put the number at at least 90.

    The Britain-based group earlier said its sources had heard Islamic
    State fighters in conversation on walkie-talkies discussing the
    capture of "56 crusader prisoners."

    An official of the Assyrian Church in Beirut, who asked not to be
    named, said that four churches - one of them among the oldest in
    Syria - had been burned down by the jihadists.

    The curate of one al-Hassakeh church appealed for aid for the refugees,
    saying the local churches were not able to cope with the influx.

    "The weather is cold and there is nowhere warm for them to stay. Food
    and medicine prices are high," the curate, who asked not to be named,
    said. "Syrians, Muslims and Christians alike are faced with a human
    tragedy and nobody pays any heed."

    Other refugees said local Christians were being exposed to ethnic
    cleansing.

    "We are falling victim to genocide, they torture us and expel us
    and nobody comes to our aid," said Ninos Khoshaba, an agricultural
    engineer in his 30s, adding that hundreds of families were still
    fleeing to Qamishli and al-Hassakeh.

    The jihadist assault on the Khabur villages came as the Kurdish
    People's Protection Units claimed advances against Islamic State
    north-east of al-Hassakeh.

    The Observatory said the Syrian Kurdish forces, backed up by US-led air
    raids and cross-border artillery fire from the Iraqi Kurdish Peshmerga,
    had captured 30 settlements from the jihadists in recent days.

    The United Nations Monday released a report saying that Islamic State
    had committed possible acts of genocide when it targeted Yezidi,
    Christian and Shiite communities in Iraq last year.

    Earlier this month the group published a video showing its fighters
    in Libya beheading 21 mostly Egyptian Christian migrant workers,
    whom it also termed "crusaders."

    Assyrian Christians have for centuries lived in several dozen villages
    in the fertile land along the banks of the Khabur river west of
    al-Hassakeh.

    Local sources say that the river forms the effective boundary between
    areas controlled by the YPG and those held by Islamic State, and that
    many civilians had already left the villages on the south bank.

    The Assyrians follow an ancient Eastern Christian rite and speak a
    form of Aramaic, the language of Jesus. Their largest communities
    are in north-eastern Syria and nearby areas of northern Iraq.

    They have suffered several waves of persecution, most notably during
    the massacres often referred to as the Armenian Genocide in Turkey
    in 1915.

    http://dalje.com/en-world/islamic-state-overruns-historic-christian-area-in-syria-abducts-90/537861

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