The Fate of Iraq’s Christians

The Fate of Iraq’s Christians
by Eden Naby

Progressivetrail.com
13 sept 04

Just after celebration of the Festival of the Cross (Aida d-Sliwa) on
Friday, 10 September, the village of Baghdeda, located southeast of
Mosul, on the Nineveh Plains, in the Ninawa Governorate, came under
mortar attack. Thus far a complete tally of the dead and injured in
this village of 30,000 Christians has not been transmitted abroad. We
know that the Sheeto family lost 13-year-old Mark Louis Sheeto and
that his brother and sister were critically injured.

It is unusual for information from Christian villages to filter
outside the area currently under military and political pressure from
the Kurdish Democratic Party. Kurds are barring Western journalists
from entering villages like Dayrabun (“Monastary of the Bishop”)
which are not in any danger zone, but are being denied resettlement
by their Christian inhabitants (reported by Thiry August, a Belgian
who tried to visit the Faysh Khabour area this summer). The KDP
is determined to expand its control as far to the west and south
as possible into areas now inhabited by ChaldoAssyrians. Under the
Transitional Administrative Law, so favorable to Kurds, the objects
of Western sympathy and funds, any territory in the three provinces
adjoining Dohuk, Arbil and Sulaymaniya (Ninawa, Tamim [Kirkuk]
and Diyala) that Kurds can show they controlled on March 19, 2003
(prior to the invasion), may become part of the Kurdish controlled
region in northern Iraq (TAL, Article 53A).

This provision allows Kurds to create “facts on the ground” in
the Mosul and Kirkuk areas in particular, at the expense of unarmed
ethnic and religious minorities – to wit – the Christians of Iraq, the
Yezidis, the Shabat, and the Turkomens. The advantages of controlling
Kirkuk are well known. But the Mosul area, now the scene of fierce
attacks on Christians and Turkomens, are less well recognized.

– The Nineveh Plains hold Iraq’s largest and most fertile agricultural
fields (barley, wheat and legumes). The ChaldoAssyrians had been
farming these for millennia until the steady pressure of Kurdish
population growth combined with Baathist village destruction forced
many of them to be displaced. There is considerable evidence that
Kurdish pastoralists have had a difficult time becoming productive
farmers. (ASSYRIAN STAR, Spring 2004, “Helwa, the Forgotten Tragedy”)

– The Nineveh Plains, through which passes the upper Tigris River
and its tributaries, holds the main water source for central and
south Iraq. Control of places like Faysh Khabour (to where thousands
of Christian villagers are not being allowed to return [NYT Sept. 12,
2004 “Assyrians in Syria”]) lies at the juncture of both the Tigris as
it enters Iraq from Turkey, and where the oil pipeline from the Kirkuk
fields enters Turkey on its way to Ceyhan. The KDP, and its strategic
allies, are grabbing control of Faysh Khabour and its environs,
at the expense of the area’s indigenous Christian inhabitants.

– The possibility of gas fields on the Nineveh Plains
makes control of this region triply attractive for the
Kurds. Barzani has already threatened war with regard to Kirkuk
(). [It is suspicious]
that that the methodical killing of Turkomens and ChaldoAssyrian
leaders by “unknown” assailants stands to profit the KDP, whether this
organization acts as a Sunni Muslim force or a secular Kurdish one.

The attack on Baghdeda, also known as Qaraqosh, marks the long and
largely ignored attacks on Iraq’s Christians who, with the exception
of some 10,000 Armenians, descendents of refugees from the atrocities
of WWI, form the one million or more indigenous Christian population
of Iraq. The term “Assyrian” by which this community has been known
historically (always called so by their Armenian neighbors) includes
several church communities of which the largest is the Chaldean
Catholic. Also included are two branches of the Church of the East,
and members of the Orthodox and Catholic Syrian churches, together
with small Protestant and Seventh Day Adventist congregations.

Both the Baathists (in Iraq and in Syria) and the Kurds have
attempted to divide this community along denominational lines for
easier control. But at their own conference of Chaldeans, Syriacs
and Assyrians, convened in Baghdad 22-24 October 2003, the unified,
albeit artificial term, ChaldoAssyrian, was adopted to forestall
Kurdish poliltical manipulation, which nonetheless continues. This
term appears in the Transitional Administrative Law (TAL) signed on 8
March 2004 by the Governing Council. “Assyrian,” dropped from Iraqi
census since 1977 as punishment for opposition to the Baath regime,
is widely used in the diaspora. But TAL recognition of this community
marks a historic first in Iraqi law.

The ChaldoAssyrians form the world’s last and largest compact
community of Aramaic (Syriac) speakers, the oldest continuously
written and spoken language of the Middle East, and after Chinese,
the second oldest continuously written and spoken language of the
world. This now endangered language will become extinct if the
ChaldoAssyrians are forced into mass exodus from Iraq, a prospect
activated by their inability to maintain a foothold, a safe haven, in
northern Iraq. A combination of Kurdish chauvinism and fundamentalist
terrorism (both Arab and Kurdish) has already driven large numbers,
probably thousands, of ChaldoAssyrians out of the country. As Patrick
Cockburn has reported recently with regard to the Turkomens, the US
military is apparently being manipulated by the KDP in the attacks
on Shiite Turkomens at Tel Afar, also in the path of KDP expansion
(). Blind sympathy for Kurds is
allowing the US to become complicit in the ethnic displacement of
Christians as well as Turkomens. Specifically in the Christian case,
the community is regularly denied funds for refugee resettlement
and village reconstruction while Kurdish villagers settle on former
Christian lands with US and international funding.

The early evening mortar attack on the homes of Christians in
Baghdeda comes in the wake of a bloody forty days for this community,
highlighted by the 1 August simultaneous bombing of five churches,
one in Mosul and the others in Baghdad. While it has been impossible
to determine the instigators of violence against Christians in
Basra and Baghdad, and no doubt some of the Baghdad kidnapping
for ransom is the work of criminal gangs possibly allied to the
insurgency, the upsurge in attacks on Christians in the north, on the
Nineveh Plains especially, is widely believed to be the work of KDP
agents. Kurdish attacks on Christians has a long history, stretching
well before WWI and the Hamidiya units of Kurdish irregulars that
were largely responsible for the Assyrian genocide in southeastern
Turkey and northwest Iran. The current attacks appear to be targeted
at Christians in the north of Iraq, on the Nineveh Plains, and the
villages to which those fleeing Basra and Baghdad are hoping to
return. These internally displaced persons (IDPs), as well as the
refugees stranded in Jordan and Syria, need both resettlement funds
and security from Kurdish attacks and pressure. Yet the community is
currently only supported by funds collected from the diaspora – and
in some cases – when the diaspora funds a project, such as electrical
generators, Kurdish thugs blow them up. In other instances, the KDP has
blockaded Assyrian villages and prevented delivery of food supplies.
( ).

Over the past few days alone, a sharply increased pattern of attack
on Christians in the north has emerged as gathered from websites
(). What is happening in the more isolated
villages remaining in Berwari, Aqra and Zakho may be even more deadly.

1. Mosul, Nineveh Province. 8 Sept. Video of real or enacted beheading
distributed in Mosul to frighten Assyrians into leaving the area.

“According to residents of Mosul, a group of Islamic terrorists has
distributed in the past few days a video CD containing the beheading
of two Assyrian Christians from Mosul. To date, the identity of the
Assyrian victims is still unknown. Many residents have seen the video
and claimed that it was very disturbing.”

2. Mosul, Nineveh Province. 8 Sept. Assassination of three women,
wounding of another and driver, as they traveled back to home village
of Bartilla from Mosul.

“On Tuesday August 31, 2004, Tara Majeed Betros Al-Hadaya, Taghrid
Abdul-Massih Ishaq Betros and her sister Hala Abdul-Massih Ishaq
Betros, were murdered in Mosul. The three Assyrian victims were
returning to their homes in Bartilla, from a hospital in Mosul, where
they worked, when their car was attacked by a group of terrorists
who opened heavy fire at the car.

The attack took place in the section between the Television area and
the Kokajli area on the main road between Mosul and Bartilla. Also
injured in the attack was another Assyrian woman, ‘Amera Nouh Sha’ana
who was also going home to Bartilla and the Assyrian driver, Naji
Betros Ishaq. The three female victims were in their twenties.

The residents of Bartilla are followers of the Syriac Orthodox Church,
and the town is the birthplace of His Holiness Mor Ignatius Yacoub III,
the late Patriarch of the Syriac Orthodox Church.”

3. Mosul, Nineveh Province. 9 Sept. Two Assyrian brothers, both
community leaders, are riddled with bullets. Community believes goal
of intensified attacks is to terrorize them and force the indigenous
people to leave, and thus stop disputing Kurdish claims to Mosul,
now being vociferously put forward in Kurdish media.

“On Thursday September 2, 2004, Khaled Boulos (1972-2004) and his
brother Hani Boulos (1976-2004), who are known as the sons of Hasina,
were murdered in Mosul in the Al-Sa’a district. The deceased Assyrian
brothers were known by many Assyrians for their honorable stands
in Mosul in defending and assisting other Assyrians. According
to eyewitnesses, on September 2, at noon (local Mosul time) in
the Al-Mayasa (Al-Sa’a) district, a car carrying a group of armed
terrorists pulled by Khaled and Hani Boulos, where the armed terrorists
came out of the car and began firing heavily at the two Assyrians,
killing them instantly. The two Assyrian brothers worked for a foreign
company in Mosul, which the terrorists used as an excuse to murder
them. However, the peaceful Assyrians of Mosul believe that the main
goal of the intensified attacks on Assyrian Christians is to terrorize
the indigenous Assyrians and force them to leave their homeland.”

4. Mosul, Nineveh Province. 9 Sept. Assyrian political activist run
over by car without plates as terrorists target Christians. Suspected
terrorists are considered part of Kurdish plan to empty the region
of Assyrians who dispute Kurdish claim to entire north.

“On Wednesday September 1, 2004, during a terrorist attack on the
building of the Governorate of Ninawa, Nisan Sliyo Shmoel was injured
in his shoulder. Mr. Shmoel was taken immediately to the hospital where
he was treated. After treatment, he was released from the hospital that
same day, but the terrorists were awaiting his release and targeted
him with an unmarked car (not carrying plate numbers), which they
used to drive him over in front of the hospital entrance. Mr. Shmoel
died immediately.

Martyr Nisan Sliyo Shmoel was 43 years old. He is survived by his wife
and 6 children (5 daughters and a son). The oldest of his children is
15 years old. Shortly after the toppling of Saddam Hussein’s regime,
Nisan Sliyo Shmoel joined the Assyrian Patriotic Party (Gaba Atranaya
Aturaya) to serve his Assyrian people. Mr. Shmoel was also a private in
the newly formed Iraqi Army, which he had joined to serve his country.”

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://nahrain.com/d/news/04/09/10/nhr0910f.html
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/
http://www.aina.org/releases/1999/blockade.htm
http://www.bethsuryoyo.com/