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Fate Of Syrian Christians Kidnapped By ISIS Still Unknown

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  • Fate Of Syrian Christians Kidnapped By ISIS Still Unknown

    FATE OF SYRIAN CHRISTIANS KIDNAPPED BY ISIS STILL UNKNOWN

    Aleteia
    Feb 25 2015

    Aid groups gear up to help more internally displaced persons.

    John Burger

    Christian aid groups were expecting to hear about the fate of some
    150 Syrian Christian hostages today, but a promised ISIS announcement
    about the captives was not forthcoming.

    According to activists and state-run media in Syria, however, Islamic
    State group militants moved the hostages to a city they control in
    northeastern Syria, while they continue to battle Kurdish and Christian
    militiamen for control of a chain of villages along the Khabur River,
    according to the Associated Press.

    Hassakah province, which borders Turkey and Iraq, has become the
    latest battleground for the fight against the Islamic State group in
    Syria. It is predominantly Kurdish but also has populations of Arabs
    and predominantly Christian Assyrians and Armenians.

    In pre-dawn attacks, the group on Monday attacked communities nestled
    along the river, seizing at least 70 people, many of them women and
    children. Thousands of others fled to safer areas.

    However, the state-run SANA news agency and the Assyrian Network for
    Human Rights in Syria said the hostages have been moved to the Islamic
    State-controlled city of Shaddadeh, south of the city of Hassakah. The
    United States and a coalition of regional partners are conducting a
    campaign of airstrikes against the group, and have on occasion struck
    Shaddadeh, a predominantly Arab town.

    Archimandrite Emanuel Youkhana of the Christian Aid Program Northern
    Iraq told Aleteia partner Aid to the Church in Need that 24 families
    from Tel Gouran, 34 families from Tel Jazira, and 14 fighters from
    Tel Hormizd were captured and taken to the Arab Sunni village of
    Um Al-Masamier.

    "Um Al-Masamier is another Syrian example of what we witnessed in Iraq
    on how the Arab Sunni joining and supporting IS to attack their long
    years Christian and Yezedian neighbors, Archimandrite Youkhana said.

    He said that Assyrian Church of the East Bishop Aprem Athniel of
    Hasseke hasn't left his city despite the difficulties and is doing
    its best to host and support the displaced. "However, due to the lack
    of resources and the long years of the disaster, there is an urgent
    need of action to support the displaced families through the Church,"
    the priest said.

    Michel Constantin, regional director for Lebanon, Syria and Egypt for
    Catholic Near East Welfare Association, has been coordinating efforts
    for emergency assistance to families in Iraqi Kurdistan. Speaking to
    Aleteia from Beirut Wednesday, he said his organization is arranging
    for food packages to reach the displaced families tomorrow.

    What are you hearing about the Assyrian Christian villages that have
    been threatened by Islamic State militants?

    I contacted the Assyrian bishop in Hassakah, whose name is Mar Arpem
    Athniel, and he informed me that already 700 families have been
    displaced from the Christian villages to Hassakah, and another 200
    were displaced to Qamishli, and at present the Pontifical Mission is
    conveying funds to buy food packages for 900 families. It will be going
    through Iraq because you cannot convey the money straight to Syria.

    The families are not in tents or camps; they are settled in homes of
    relatives, or in some cases Christian families have recently fled from
    Hassakah because of fear of the security situation. So the bishop
    opened individual houses, and families were settled in individual
    houses within the city. ... Of course, they lack everything: they
    don't have any food, heating fuel, medicines. They need many things.

    We will try to respond to the emergency by tomorrow to convey some
    money, and we will try to coordinate our efforts with other partners.

    We expect another 200 families within a few days.

    http://www.aleteia.org/en/world/article/fate-of-syrian-christians-kidnapped-by-isis-still-unknown-5303736456970240




    From: A. Papazian
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