CHRISTIANS FLEE IRAQ, AUTHORITIES ACCUSE AL QAEDA
PanARMENIAN.Net
21.10.2008 15:56 GMT+04:00
/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Nearly 600 more Christian families have fled the
northern Iraqi city of Mosul over the past week, amid threats by
Muslim extremists to convert to Islam or risk death, an official in
Nineveh province said Monday.
Last week, Iraq’s Ministry of Immigration and Displaced Persons said
1,424 Christian families had fled Mosul. Nineveh Deputy Gov. Khasro
Goran said the number has since risen to 2,000, based on the most
recent figures from Nineveh’s office of Immigration and Displaced
Persons.
Fourteen Christians have been slain in recent weeks in Mosul, which
is about 260 miles north of Baghdad. On Friday, Iraqi security forces
arrested four men in Mosul in connection with anti-Christian attacks.
Iraqi authorities believe al Qaeda in Iraq is behind the
violence. Mosul is one of the last Iraqi cities where al Qaeda in
Iraq has a significant presence and routinely carries out attacks.
Iraqi security forces continue to patrol the city daily – particularly
the city’s Christian neighborhoods – and violence has decreased as
a result, Goran said. Despite this, more families have fled and very
few families have returned, he said.
Authorities said the attacks may have been prompted by Christian
demonstrations ahead of provincial elections earlier this month.
Hundreds of Christians took to the streets in Mosul and surrounding
villages and towns, demanding adequate representation on provincial
councils, whose members will be chosen in the local elections.
Iraqi leaders have expressed concern about the anti-Christian attacks.
A meeting held Monday in Mosul included Iraqi Deputy Prime Minister
Rafei al-Isawi, Nineveh Gov. Duraid Kashmoula, local military leaders,
prominent Christian leaders and other provincial officials.
The officials reviewed the latest developments in the city and called
on Christian families to return to their homes.
During the meeting, al-Isawi announced that the Iraqi government has
an intelligence report showing al Qaeda in Iraq is behind the killings
and displacement of Christians, according to Goran.
An employee of Iraq’s spy service was wounded Monday morning when a
bomb attached to his car by insurgents detonated in eastern Baghdad,
killing two bystanders, an Interior Ministry official said.
The Monday morning blast occurred in Maysaloun Square in eastern
Baghdad, and killed a husband and wife inside an adjacent taxi,
the official said, CNN reports.