If you had read the independent Iraki newsagency Aswat al Iraq‘s English language coverage of Ninewa governorate in general and the disaster that is befalling Mosul’s Christians in particular you would know that that yesterday evening "more than thirty" Christian families had fled Mosul within a space of two days. "More than thirty" — you could be forgiven for having the the impression that only a few more than thirty families have fled, thirty one, thirty two, thirty three perhaps … … … "more than thirty".
The reality is catastrophically worse. Hundreds of Christian families have fled their homes in the last two days in Mosul and it’s suburbs in terror for their lives.
If you are a Christian in Mosul today the overwhelming factor in your life is that to fear being hunted down and slaughtered without mercy is an entirely reasonable fear to have. The source of the "more than thirty" quote is Bashar Kiki who is the head of the village council for Tal Keef. However, if you read the report that my colleague Mohammed Al-Hamadani posted earlier today (Arabic language) it becomes very clear that Bashar Kiki1 was speaking only of families whom he personally had met and to whom he personally offered help.
However when you count all the Christian families who have fled their homes in Mosul in the last few days and not just those who fled to Tal Keef as we have done and as Bishop Emil Shimoun Nona, Chaldean archbishop of Mosul, has done then the scale of the catastrophe engulfing Mosul’s Christians becomes clear.
Speaking from Mosul the Bishop spoke of a "humanitarian emergency" and revealed that in just one day, yesterday, "hundreds of Christian families" had fled the city taking what they could carry leaving their homes and livelihoods behind them. Those families are now destitute.
The archbishop of Mosul is concerned about the many families, "hundreds" in one day yesterday, leaving the city. Bishop Nona speaks of an " unending via Crucis” and denounces the "change in methods" operated by the armed gangs. "In the past we said to the Christians to remain closed in the house – he remembers – but now they are even attacked in their own homes”. The reference is to the murder took place last February 23: commandos entered the house of Aishwa Marosi, a Christian of 59, killing the man and two boys. His wife and daughter witnessed the murder but were spared by the criminals.
Bishop Nona confirms the risk that "Mosul will be emptied completely of Christians”, who are fleeing towards the plain of Nineveh and other places considered safer. "Yesterday I visited some families – he continues – I have tried to bring comfort, but the situation is dramatic. The people fled without taking anything with them”. This is why the local archdiocese has launched an initial emergency response, trying to provide "essential supplies and relief", but the danger of "a humanitarian crisis is real."
The archbishop of Mosul plans to travel to Baghdad to meet with politicians and the central government, to demand their intervention. It is difficult to maintain the Christian presence, he continues, and it is likely that the general elections – scheduled for March 7 – no one will vote. The confining of Iraq’s Christians in the Nineveh Plain, victims of a power struggle between Arabs and Kurds, seems an increasingly concrete likelihood, although the Church leaders have always been opposed to this "ghettoisation". So far, the warring factions have used the excuse of religion and armed gangs to drag the Christians into the conflict. "For this – concluded Mgr. Nona – we now need to find a ‘political response’ to the conflicts, the struggle for power.”
Among those hundreds of Christian families who fled their homes yesterday were the families of two Gorilla’s Guides team members. More Christians have fled Mosul this morning. Among those who fled this morning were a further two families of Gorilla’s Guides Christian team members in Mosul.
When I wrote "Nearly One Million Christians – Most Of Them Now On The Run" nearly two years ago, we had twenty five Christian team members and associates together with their families living in Mosul and it’s suburbs. Today February 25th 2010 we have one Christian team member left living in the city. He lives alone having sent his family to stay in the home of another team member far from Mosul for their safety.
The savage murder of the 59 year old Assyrian Christian Aishwa Maroki by a gang of gunmen who smashed down his front door to get at him and then slaughtered him and and his two sons Bassim and Mokhlas in front of his terrified wife and daughter has terrorised many of Mosul’s Christians beyond endurance. As my colleague has reported in the immediately preceding posting (see ???? ??? ?????? ?? ????? ?????? ???? ????? | Gorilla’s Guides ) The leader of Tal Keef district council, Bashar Kiki, has said that he personally has offered assistance to thirty Christian refugee families and that he expects more Christian refugees to arrive in the next few days.
Mosul’s Christians are the victims of the complete breakdowns in law and order that have taken place repeatedly in Mosul since the American invasion of Irak. They are the victims of several concentrated campaigns of terror against them. There is the campaign by Takfiri extremists and there are the competing campaigns of Arab and Kurdish nationalists. Wherever my Christian brothers and sisters in humanity look in the city that is their home Mosul’s Christians see only threats and predators. The security forces, the Peshmerga now flooding the city, and the American forces who patrol with the Peshmerga do nothing to protect the Christians. Nor do they do anything to protect the other minorities such as the Shabaki and the Yazhidi.
We have many eyewitness reports from witnesses whom we know to be credible of Peshmerga and their American allies standing by and doing nothing while Christians are attacked in front of their eyes. We have reports from people whose testimony we know to be credible of Christians being "fingered" by the new "security" forces flooding Mosul and then being attacked. We are not the only people with thick dossiers of such reports. Every human rights organisation with a presence in the governorate has such a dossier.
The parallels with the death squad murder campaigns of recent years in which the death squads consisting of "men dressed in police uniform" and "men dressed in army uniform" turned out to be police and soldiers are too clear and too appalling to be missed. As with those campaigns the aim is explicitly political — to remove a political obstacle by forcing an entire community to flee in terror from their homes
When Mosul’s Christians say that they are surrounded by threats and predators in the city that is their home and that among worst predators are those whose duty it is to protect them they are telling the truth.
Like Bashar Kikim, and Bishops Sako and Nona we in Gorilla’s Guides know that we can expect more Christians to flee in terror as the terror campaigns against them escalate. We expect increased violence against them and the other minority groups, such as Turkmen, Fayli, Shabaki, and Yazhidi in the run up to the election. We expect the violence levels to escalate against them still further as the issues of Kirkuk and the so-called "disputed areas" come once more to forefront of the political arena. This is the second time in recent years that I have burnt with rage and shame that we cannot do more to protect our Christian brothers and sisters. I believe that it is now very doubtful that there will be any surviving Christians in Irak in a few years time.
Mohammed Ibn Laith
Notes and references:
- I have met and dealt with Bashar Kiki on occasion as have many other team members and we know him to be a truthful, honourable, upright, and compassionate man.
- For a background briefing on Iraki Christians see: Nearly One Million Christians – Most Of Them Now On The Run | Gorilla’s Guides I wrote it on March 23, 2008 in it I deal with Iraki Christian history and discuss the legal (Shariah) situation as regards their rights to live and worship in peace and freedom.
- However the Takfiri campaign against Iraki Christians in general and Mosuli Christians in particular is only one of several campaigns against them. Most of the attacks on them are ethnic cleansing from one group or another. Some of the best coverage is from the Vatican run Asia News who are unafraid of using their excellent local contacts and contacts with local organisations to get at the truth.
- The homepage for Asia News’ English language service is at this link.
This report explains clearly the basic problem IRAQ Mosul: targeted execution of Christians continues in media and government silence – Asia News the last part of which I extract immediately below:
Local witnesses reported that "the murder took place in front of the security forces, who saw all the phases of the attack, but did not intervene." A Catholic in Mosul says that "the tactic is to murder Christians, because the media does not talk about it." A strategy that aims to push Christians towards the plain of Nineveh, "in the silence and indifference of the government and the international community."
A source for AsiaNews in Mosul, adds that "Christians are living in panic and have begun fleeing from the city". He explains that "these are not normal criminals," but behind them are "specific political plans" that the government is not countering. There is no information from Baghdad "about who is behind attacks on churches and Christians," but the source is confident that the central executive, the governorship of Mosul and the Kurdish leadership "are aware" of the plan against the Christian community.
"It is easier to attribute responsibility to Al Qaeda – concludes the source – and the fundamentalist fringe. In reality, Christians are victims of a power struggle between Arabs and Kurds".
- My colleague Ali who has excellent contacts in Mosul and trained our coordinator there made a simlar point om May 13, 2009:
Suffer The Little Children | Gorilla’s Guides:
There’s a reason why our Christian fellow citizens are fleeing Irak and not coming back. The tragedy of Tony Edward Shiol’s murder illustrates it perfectly — Christians are targets. Sometimes they are targeted as a matter of ethnic cleansing, sometimes because of warped and fanatical religiosity, and sometimes because they are often seen as being a relatively wealthy and relatively powerless minority.
Irak’s Christians have been through hell, Irak’s Christians continue to endure hell – the figures speak for themselves. As best I can determine the Christian population stood at 1.2 million in 1991, 800,000 in 2003 and is less than 400,000 today. When I talk to the few of my Christian friends who remain in Irak, they are divided. Some dream of a return to old days of an Irak that treats its Christian minority well and cherishes their presence. An Irak in other words that behaves like Syria and Jordan. There are many who have given up and are fleeing to Europe, to America, or to wherever will take them, finally there are some who want their own semi-autonomous region in the Plain of Ninawa.
This last option the “Ninawa plains project” is fatally flawed. Its flaw is that the Kurds are determined to incorporate the Ninawa plains into what is rapidly evolving from an autonomous region to a de facto state while the governorate authorities and the government in Baghdad are equally determined to prevent the Kurdish land grab. The result is that Christians, especially Christian families with children, are vulnerable to intimidation and coercion from all sides. No wonder they flee.
- Further coverage can be found here:
Updates:
While I was writing this during the day my colleagues were working on the postings and summaries for tonight. Here is some of what is in their preliminary drafts (I have translated from Arabic):
Several attacks on minority members in Mosul:
- Two shabaki were murdered by gunmen who forced their way into their workshop in East Mosul and shot them dead.
- The body of a woman who had had been killed by having her head cut off was found in al-Mashierfa (west Mosul).
- An old lady was stabbed to death in her home in al-Zuhoor (east Mosul) by men who forced their way into her house.
- Three Christians were captured and shot dead by a gang of gunmen on the plains of Ninewa.
- A man was shot dead in South Mosul in a drive by shooting.
- Also on the plains of Ninewa the body a man who is believed to be a Yazhidi was found he had been very recently shot.



27 Comments







This is posting is crossposted directly from Gorilla’s Guides as are the tags used.
If you are a member of a church I would ask you strongly to print this and insist your priest reads it.
We try to keep up with the situation of Christians in Irak. Generally we index under these topics:
* Christians
* Ethnic cleansing of Christians
Mohammed Ibn Laith
I see that Firedoglake’s version of WPMU does not “do” Arabic – which is why one of the links appears as a series of question marks. It is not important the link itself works.
Mohammed Ibn Laith
Given how Ultra Christian our Army is suppose to be I’m wondering just what is going through the General’s heads?
Given how ultra racist they are towards the s*ndn*gg*rs who live in Irak what makes you think they give a sh*t? It’s not like we s*ndn*gg*rs are people now is it?
They have their alliance with the Pesh and that’s all they care about. Until, of course, it’s the Kurd’s turn to be knifed in the back by their invader “allies”.
Mohammed Ibn Laith
Racism follows patterns normally they put a small minority in charge of a large population of a different Race, Religion, Tribe etc. This way the rulers are always unsteady and must turn to their former colonial masters for help.
If anything they should have put the Christians in charge but you got the facts on the ground if you say America is backing the Kurds then America is backing the Kurds.
Turkey, Iran, Syria all have Kurdish populations I believe if the Kurds in Iraq get free they could start a push for a Kurdish homeland carved out of Turkey, Iran, Syria.
It looks like America is planning its next war. Only this time we will have Christian Iraqi spies we can recruit.
In which case what the Syrians, Iranians, and Turks, will team up to do to the Kurds will make what the Turks did to the Armenians and Hitler did to the Jews look like children having a kite war.
Did you know that the Iranians already allow Turkish military units to cross freely into Iran if it’s in pursuit of Kurdish rebels and that the Turks reciprocate?
The Syrian Kurds know what Assad’s father did at Hama anybody who thinks Assad Junior would be afraid to follow in daddy’s footsteps needs to talk urgently with their doctor.
See by setting up the Kurds in Iraq you could start mini civil wars in several countries America will then protect the Kurds in Iraq from getting attached and sell the Kurds weapons to arm their fellow Kurds in different Countries.
Any attempt to punish the Kurds will be called a war crime. The Bush Family has no shame.
There is no excuse for racism
Surah 49:13 The Inner Apartments
And that applies equally to the behaviour described in the link given by maqaquerman it is flat out against scripture.
I’m very glad to hear you say that it is against all the teachings. I thought that to be the case; that whatever passes for a law that would excuse such things is a wrong law.
best wishes for the successful completion of your studies.
I am not excusing racism I am explaining it. I grew up the only and in many cases the first brown face my neighbors ever saw. As you can guess it wasn’t a fun experience.
I did not think you were.
I was telling you that God teaches us the Holy Qur’an that it is flat against his commands to us to be a racist.
What’s really surprised me is that the Kurds haven’t been knifed in the back by us just yet. I think it’s an indication that despite Western wishful thinking, Iraq’s still not stable enough to effectively screw on a long-term basis.
No part of Irak is stable. The three governorates that comprise the KRG are a lot less unstable than the rest of Irak however. Even so I think that they run the risk of overreaching and that the Kurds in the next few years will re-learn the truth of their proverb that they only friends they have are the mountains. They also risk a civil war. The Barzani – Talabani feud is very far from settled and now that there is Goran their internal situation seems to be heating up.
Could America and Europe be looking the other way at these attacks because they want Christian spies for later? Or do they want Iraqi Christians to give speeches in America and Europe to support the war?
I know its not sane but Bush might be thinking Christian Iraqi refugees might act like the Cuban refugees did when they came to America.
Spies for what? Conspiracy theories can be overdone. Use Occam’s razor:
They are looking the other way because they don’t give a sh*t what happens to a bunch of s*ndn*gg*r ayrabs. They don’t give a sh*t what happens to s*ndn*gg*r ayrabs like me who are Muslim and they certainly don’t give a a sh*t what happens to a bunch of s*ndn*gg*r ayrabs who are Christians and therefore without a large and heavily armed militia to protect them.
Who cares what Bush thinks he is thankfully no longer your commander in chief. (Not that there’s any significant difference between him and your current commander in chief.)
Bush 1 went in first, Bush 2 went in to avenge his father get some oil etc Jeb Bush is thinking of running for President. Occam’s Razor if another member the famously vindictive Bush Family gets to the White House again yes they will attack you again.
And yes they plan this kind of conspiracy stuff Bush 1 was head of the CIA before he became President.
it’s a problem that exists in many places.
http://www.wnd.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=37913
and for thousands of years, Things.
and you can be sure that the killing of the Christians in Iraq is not part of any Bush plan. It’s not like they had a plan. Or even a clue.
They have bad plans.
Sudan is now and always has been a by word for barbarism. It is another example of the terrible things men do whenever law ceases to exist and they have absolute power of somebody else.
For the record I am a student of the Shariah and will within a few years have qualified as a judge of the Shariah. Nowhere in any of the laws and judgements that I have read is what was done to that boy permissible.
Many of the things that so-called fundamentalists say are “Islamic” are very far from being sanctioned either in the Holy Qur’an, the Hadiths, or the Shariah. They are however cultural artefacts.
An example from Irak is the genital mutilation of women carried out in Kurdish areas, the average rate of FGM across Kurdistan is 74 per cent.
The practice long predates Kurdish conversion to Islam and Kurdish clergy are now actively campaigning against it. It is almost completely unknown and is forbidden in Arab parts of Irak.
Similarly the Niqab (full facial covering for women as seen in Saudi which salafists will tell you is the only approved dress for women in Arab Muslim countries is in fact rooted in rural Saudi culture.
With the spread of missionary wahabism they have tried to persuade Iraki/Lebanese/Syrian/Egytian etc etc etc that the shariah requires them to force their women to wear the niqab. Unfortunately for these missionaries the culture in these countries is somewhat different – the only women who wore it when I was a child were whores. If you saw a woman wearing it you knew that was what she was.
However while I would greatly enjoy doing Dawa with the people here at Firedoglake my purpose is to highlight what is being done to Irak’s Christians and to encourage you to make as much of a fuss as you can about it.
It is a little after midnight here and I must log off. However either I or a another team member with direct knowledge of what is going on in Mosul will come tomorrow and do our best to answer any comments or questions that people may have.
Sorry I’m late, Mohammed.
I’ve a couple Christian ladies at work. I’ll give them copies of your post. They’re very active in the church and will spread the word. I’ll check to see if American Friends Service Committee or War Resister’s League are on it.
All of you be safe, my brother.
Mohammed, you mentioned takfiris, and, the police and army were active participants in the terror… I thought the bulk of the National police units and Army units were Shi’a, not Sunni Sufis and Salafi…!
That is not quite what I saying. I am saying that the Takfiri campaign against them was either the largest or the most lethal of the campaigns against them.
In Mosul you have several warring parties. Arab Sunnis, Arab Shia, Arab nationalists, Kurdish Separatists. Each of these are acting ruthlessly either to gain or to hold territory and thus of what are now known to be fantastically rich, pure, and easily extracted oil reserves. (This is also true of Kirkuk).
What is going on in Mosul in particular is not linked to the so-called Islamic State of Iraq or similar bodies. Instead it is evidence that the police, the army, and the internal security apparat has been infiltrated by elements that are aligned with political groupings, religious bodies, and of course the tribes.
Additionally within the police, the army, and the internal security apparat there severe pressures being exerted by foreigners. The American invaders and Iran are the two most obvious examples but the the Turks and the Syrians are also trying to increase their influence.
Sufism is not a sect it is an approach and as you have mentioned them it is worth mentioning that contrary to what many Westerners have been told that their are Sufis who are of the Ahl as-Sunnah Wa’l Jama’ah (Sunni) and Sufis who are of the Ahl al-Bayt (Shia).
It is also worth denouncing as a ridiculous lie the ridiculous lie that Sufis are not warlike. Really? Tell that to Salah ad Din, or to Omar Mukhtar, Abdul-Qadir al-Jazairi, or to Imam Shamil. If you try mentioning to Izzat Ibrahim al Douri that as a well known Sufi he should refrain from making war I am quite certain that he will dispute the point by killing you. Both Colonel Iihsan and Colonel Khdhayyir who write on “Guides” are Sufi one of them is of the Ahl as-Sunnah Wa’l Jama’ah and one of the Ahl al-Bayt.
In my family alone and for both sides again mixed of the Ahl as-Sunnah Wa’l Jama’ah and the Ahl al-Bayt here are the Sufis that I know of:
* My great great great great great great grandfathers.
* My great great great great great grandfathers.
* My great great great great grandfathers.
* My great great great grandfathers.
* My great great grandfathers.
* My great grandfathers.
* My grandfather.
* My father and all my uncles.
* All my elder brothers.
* Me.
All of us as I know from the records of my family history from tribes who were quite prepared to fight if the need arose. I know from talking to them that my grandfather, my father, all my uncles, and my elder brothers did not regard wearing the tasawwuf as some sort of obstacle to a willingness to bear and use arms when the situation demands it and
and nor do I.
When you say Salafists – I presume you mean the al-Salafiyya al-jihadiyya and not the al-Salafiyya al-’ilmiyya, if my assumption is correct then they are the same people as the Takfiris.
When these families flee, where do they go? Are there safe haven areas or any relief organizations that are providing any assistance to them.
A few flee to the Kurdish controlled governorates. But most go to Syria. Many hope to be given refugee status either by European countrys or by America or Canada.
Yes there are refugee organisations, the UNHCR, various religious charities, and most close to us on “Guides” the Red Crescent/Red Cross.
Again I ask all who read this to do what they can to make people aware of what is being done to the Christians of Irak. They are your brothers and sisters in humanity quite as much as they are mine and they are living in terror and desperation. [Edited by Moderator: please do not bold your entire comment.]
Mohammed Ibn Laith