Iraq Christians flee as Islamic State takes Qaraqosh
BBC | 7 August 2014
Up
to a quarter of Iraq's Christians are reported to be fleeing after
Islamic militants seized the minority group's biggest town.
The Islamic State (IS) group captured Qaraqosh overnight after the withdrawal of Kurdish forces.
IS has been gaining ground in northern Iraq since June, and also controls some of Syria.
The US has warned that the situation for Iraq's minority groups threatens to become a "humanitarian catastrophe".
``We are gravely concerned for their health and safety," said White House spokesman Josh Earnest.
But he refused to confirm a New York Times
report that the US is considering air strikes to help the Yazidi
community, another minority group in northern Iraq that has been
targeted by IS.
About 50,000 Yazidis are thought to have been trapped in the
mountains after fleeing the town of Sinjar - although the UN says some
of them have now been rescued.
Tens of thousands of religious minorities have been forced to flee since IS, a Sunni Muslim group formerly known as Isis, launched its onslaught.
IS says it has created an Islamic state in the territory it controls.
In other developments:
- A suicide bombing in a Shia Muslim area of Baghdad killed at least 14 people
- IS said it had captured the strategic Mosul dam on the Tigris river - a claim denied by Kurdish forces who insist they are still in control
- At least six people died in a car bomb attack near a Shia mosque in the northern city of Kirkurk
Plea for help
A majority of Nineveh inhabitants left their homes overnight, according to Fraternite en Irak, an international Christian organisation based in Paris.
Pope Francis has made an impassioned appeal to the international community to do much more to address the crisis.
A Vatican statement said the Pope had appealed for "all
necessary help" to be given to those forced to flee their homes, "whose
fate depends entirely on the solidarity of others".
And Minority Rights Group International has warned that Iraq's multi-ethnic future is now at grave risk.
Christian 'catastrophe'
Kurdish forces, known as the Peshmerga, have been fighting the IS militants' advance for weeks.
The Peshmerga's commander in Qaraqosh reportedly told the
town's archbishop late on Wednesday that the forces were abandoning
their posts.
Several senior clergymen in Nineveh confirmed the town had fallen.
"It's a catastrophe, a tragic situation: tens of thousands of
terrified people are being displaced as we speak," said Joseph Thomas,
the Chaldean archbishop of the northern city of Kirkuk.
Eyewitnesses in Qaraqosh said IS militants were taking down crosses in churches and burning religious manuscripts.
The town - referred to as Iraq's Christian capital - is
located 30km (19 miles) south-east of the city of Mosul, which was
captured by IS in June.
Last month, hundreds of Christian families fled Mosul after
the Islamist rebels gave them an ultimatum to convert to Islam, pay a
special tax or be executed.
Iraq is home to one of the world's most ancient Christian
communities, but numbers have dwindled amid growing sectarian violence
since the US-led invasion in 2003.
Iraq's minorities
Christians
- The majority are Chaldeans, part of the Catholic Church
- Numbers have fallen from around 1.5 million since the US-led invasion in 2003 to 350,000-450,000
- In Nineveh, they live mainly in towns such as Qaraqosh (also known as Baghdida), Bartella, Al-Hamdaniya and Tel Kef
- Secretive group whose origins and ethnicity are subject to continuing debate
- Religion incorporates elements of many faiths, including Zoroastrianism
- Many Muslims and other groups view Yazidis as devil worshippers
- There are estimated to be around 500,000 Yazidis worldwide, most living in Iraq's Nineveh plains
Yazidi eyewitness: 'They want to slaughter us'
Plight of the Yazidis
Meanwhile, the UN said it was mobilising resources to assist Yazidis rescued from Mount Sinjar over the past 24 hours.
Members of the ancient Kurdish ethno-religious community sought refuge there at the weekend.
Almost 200,000 civilians have been displaced from Sinjar
town, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs has
warned.
Those trapped on the mountain are facing dehydration, and 40 children are reported to have died already.
"This is a tragedy of immense proportions, impacting the
lives of hundreds of thousands of people," said UN spokesman David
Swanson.
"Many of the displaced are in immediate need of essential
life-saving humanitarian items, including water, food, shelter and
medicine."
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