A new attack on the Christian community in Iraq.
On
the evening of December 15 armed militants abducted a young Christian
female student from her home in Iraq’s northern city of Mosul. The
gunmen burst into her home in Mosul’s Karaj neighbourhood overnight and
drove her away to an undisclosed location, according to the Ankawa
Christian news website.
The girl is a student of a local technical
institute.
It is the latest in a string of attacks against the
country's Christian community, once 100 thousand Christians lived in
Mosul, but now only five thousand live in the area, due to growing wave
of religious fundamentalism, and attacks against them.
The
Iraqi government decided only days ago to protect Christian churches
with three meter high concrete walls, to avoid tragic incidents like the
attack on the Syrian-Catholic Cathedral in Baghdad Oct. 31.
In his homily of 10 December the Syrian Catholic
Patriarch Ignatius Joseph III Younan asked the Iraqi government to
ensure the safety of all Iraqi citizens, and particularly Christians,
"people who are honest, peaceful and helpless."
The
patriarch in the mass in memory of the "46 new martyrs" of the church of
Our Lady of Salavation, which took place in the presence of members of
the government denounced that “the cover-up of the terror targeting
Iraqi Christians is still going on after such a period of time. It is the responsibility of the Iraqi government to carry out proper
and thorough investigations to uncover the terrorist groups who did plan
and finance the carnage, of whatever religious or political allegiance
they may be, and to bring them publically to justice".
His words were
echoed at the European Parliament in Strasbourg on December 15 when Mgr.
Athanase Matti Shaba Matoka, archbishop of Baghdad, told the assembly; ''Iraq's Christians live in fear of the future”.
SIC: AN/INT'L