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ISIL recaptures Mosul Dam yet again, takes 200 Kurdish Peshmerga prisoners

August 26, 2014 By administrator

Mosul (IraqiNews.com) According to an informed source in Nineveh province, on Tuesday, that the militants of the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant  took control of the 66Mosul Dam fully for the second time after fierce battles with the Peshmerga forces, while stressing that ISIL captured 200 elements  of those forces.

The source said in a statement for IraqiNews.com that “The violent clashes broke out yesterday night and continued until dawn today, between the militants of ISIL and Peshmerga forces in the region of Mosul Dam (50 km north of the city) , resulted in the control of the dam fully by the element of ISIL.”

The source, who asked not to be named, said: “the militants of ISIL announced the capture of 200 members of the Peshmerga during those clashes.”

The Ministry of Peshmerga issued a denial of these claims: Peshmerga denies ISIL’s control on Mosul Dam

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: capture, dam, ISIL, Mosul

BREAKING NEWS: Obama Says Iraqi Dam Has Been Retaken From Militants

August 18, 2014 By administrator

President Obama said Monday that Iraqi special forces, backed by American war planes, had retaken a strategically critical dam at Mosul, the latest in what he described as a string of positive steps in halting the march of Islamic extremists across the country. report NYT
“This operation demonstrates that Iraqi and Kurdish force are capable of working together to take the fight to ISIL,” Mr. Obama said in remarks in the White House briefing room, using the acronym for the extremist group, the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant. ”If that dam was breached, it could have proven catastrophic.”
Still, Mr. Obama said, “This is going to take time; there are going to be many challenges ahead.” He said that the American military campaign would continue for the foreseeable future.

READ MORE »
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/08/19/world/middleeast/iraq-mosul-dam.html?emc=edit_na_20140818

Filed Under: News Tagged With: dam, Mosul, Obama

Lebanon a safe haven but Middle Eastern Christians still at risk

August 15, 2014 By administrator

Jean Aziz is a columnist for Al-Monitor’s 

The expulsion of Christians from cities in northwestern Iraq at the hands of Islamic State (IS) militants is still resonating and felt throughout Lebanon for different reasons. The Iraqi Christians displaced by the violence in their country wait in line to receive aid from a Chaldean Catholic Church truck in Beirutfirst is that Lebanon comprises the largest number of Christians compared to other countries in the Levant. Second, Christians assume leadership positions in Lebanon, allowing them to raise issues, take a stance and make demands, a luxury that Christians in neighboring countries do not enjoy.

In addition, the churches concerned with the tragedy of Christians in Mosul and the Ninevah Plains — such as the Chaldean, Assyrian and Syriac churches — are currently all located in Lebanon in terms of religious headquarters, followers and religious officials. The presence in their homeland has become very limited and mostly silent. For these reasons, a meeting was held on Aug. 7 at the summer headquarters of the Maronite Patriarchate in Diman, a village in the north of Lebanon, which was attended by all the Levantine patriarchs.

The meeting raised three issues: the developments in Gaza; the battles in Lebanon’s Arsal between the Lebanese army and the armed Sunni fundamentalists; and the tragedy of Christian displacement from Mosul and the Ninevah Plains. Sources who participated in the meeting told Al-Monitor that the first two issues took no more than a few minutes. The articles related to them were already prepared for the draft statement that was issued after the meeting.

The discussions were, however, focused on the Iraqi incidents. The same sources said, “The interjections of religious officials stressed to identify the parties responsible for the tragedy that has befallen the Christians of Iraq since 2003.”

The participants were clear in blaming it on the repercussions of the US occupation, and the current violent and extreme inclinations characterizing political Islam. The finger was also pointed at Iraq’s neighboring countries, some of which are involved while others are accused of ignoring the situation. Some countries are also trying to achieve political gains at the expense of the tragedy taking place.

The sources said the participants expressed “strong dissatisfaction toward the Western silence and the inability of the international community to stop the crimes against humanity that are committed freely and with impunity.”

Subsequently, religious officials accused some Western countries of plotting against the Christians of the Levant, while drawing on old but well-known theories. These theories link to many factors such as the influence Israel has over some Western countries, and the potential Israeli interest in establishing pure sectarian entities. This comes in addition to Western interests to court oil-rich Islamic states, despite the latter’s discrimination against Christians living in their countries, which creates a model for extremist movements to follow. Although religious officials had different opinions about this theory, they all agreed on refusing the French stance that seemed to lure Mosul’s Christians into leaving their homeland. The officials considered the French position as a blow to the Levantine Christian stance.

For his part, the head of the Chaldean Catholic Church in Lebanon, Bishop Michel Kassarji, informed Al-Monitor about the steps that can be adopted to help with the tragedy in Mosul and Ninevah. He said, “During the meeting, the heads of the churches have discussed all the possible methods to help. … A preliminary idea was adopted, stipulating that patriarchs visit Baghdad as soon as possible, within a week maybe, to discuss with the Iraqi government the situation of Christians in Iraq. The high-ranking delegation may also visit Erbil for the same purpose.”

He added, “The patriarchs know that the fate of Christians in Iraq, or those who remained out of the 1.5 million Christians, relies on the stance of different countries around the world. This is why they are thinking of visiting all these countries, from Tehran, Riyadh and Ankara, to Western countries.” Some proposed staging protests in front of the UNESCO headquarters in Paris against the demolition of Iraqi archaeological sites that are on the World Heritage List, to incite the international public opinion to try and save buildings in case it would be impossible for human lives to be spared. Moreover, the cooperation with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Lebanon will continue in regard to its announced plan to follow up on the issue.

On the humanitarian level, the deputy patriarch of the Syriac Catholic Church, Bishop Youhana Jihad Battah, told Al-Monitor, “The humanitarian tragedy of the displaced exacerbates by the day, especially after IS militants reached the heart of the Ninevah Plains and occupied the Christian villages there, including Qaraqosh.”

He said, “The displaced did not have identity cards or passports, as IS forced them to leave empty-handed, or else they would have left Iraq. This, however, compelled them to stay and move to the Christian villages of the Ninevah Plains, the mountains of Dahuk and the Christian-dominated suburb of Ankawa, adjacent to Erbil.”

In the same context, Kassarji said, “Approximately a hundred Christian families from Mosul that were able to reach Beirut recounted the tragic situation. Their situation is dire and the only place they could resort to was the headquarters of the Chaldean Patriarchate near Beirut.”

Religious officials are incessantly talking about the latest developments in the plight of Christians in Islamic countries. They are torn between the silent knowledge that this will not be the last chapter and that Islamic fundamentalism will root Christians out of the Levant, and the deep faith that the Holy Spirit, who protected Christians for 2,000 years amid heinous horrors, will keep them in the region for longer. Which of these will prove to be right? The answer might come sooner than expected.

Jean Aziz
Columnist

Jean Aziz is a columnist for Al-Monitor’s Lebanon Pulse. He is a columnist at the Lebanese newspaper Al-Akhbar and the host of a weekly political talk show on OTV, a Lebanese TV station. He also teaches communications at the American University of Technology and the Université Saint-Esprit De Kaslik in Lebanon.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Christians, ISIL, Lebanon, Mosul

Children’s Decapitated Heads Mounted on Sticks in a Mosul Park in Iraq

August 11, 2014 By administrator

By Athena Yenko 

450217-iraq-securityHorrific details emerged out of a park in Mosul, Iraq where decapitated heads of children were mounted on sticks.

“They are systematically beheading children, and mothers and fathers. The world hasn’t seen an evil like this for a generation. There’s actually a park in Mosul that they’ve actually beheaded children and put their heads on a stick,” National spokesman for Iraqi Christians and Chaldean-American businessman, Mark Arabo, told CNN in a video.

Arabo highlighted that the appalling deed by the ISIS involved crimes against humanity. He had called for the people around the world to come together against the militants. He said that what is currently happening in Christians and other minorities in Iraq does not just constitute crimes against community or religion but crimes against humanity.

Arabo emphasised that the militant had been conducting the most “horrendous, the most heartbreaking things” that people can think of.

He went about telling that 95 per cent of Christians in Mosul were coerced to leave and the other 5 per cent decided to convert to Islam.

The ISIS militants penned a letter addressed to Christians giving them three choices – convert, pay a fine or die. Other Christians chose to pay the fine, however, the militants did not honour their words.

“The letter that they sent out with those three items (convert, pay a fine or die), they did ask to pay a fine but actually after they pay a fine, they (ISIS militants) are actually taking over their wives and their daughters and making them into their wives. So really it’s convert or die, face death by the sword,” Arabo said.

Arabo shared that militants were putting red stamp on the house of Christian families fleeing the region. The red stamp denotes that the militants will kill the family if they come back.

“… this is a Christian holocaust within our midst and the world community cannot turn a blind eye,” Arabo appealed to the world.

“This is a genocide in every sense of the word. They want everyone to convert and they want Sharia law to be the law of the land,” Arabo said wanting for his call to reach every people of every nation.

Read also: Genocide of Christians Happening, Family Shot in the Faces in Refusal to Convert

Meanwhile, the Australian government is advising all Australians against travelling to Iraq.

“We now advise Australians not to travel to Iraqi Kurdistan – the provinces of Dahuk, Erbil and Sulaymaniyah – following clashes between armed opposition groups and Peshmerga forces. Australians should depart while commercial options are available. You should also avoid travel south of Erbil and on roads between Erbil and Dohuk.”

The government is highlighting that the security situation in Iraq has deteriorated significantly. According to government information, extremists are now active in many parts of Iraq, including in Iraqi Kurdistan and the situation could persist without warning.

The Australian Embassy in Baghdad is already being kept at a minimum. In as much as the government is retaining diplomatic presence in Baghdad, the embassy remained close to the public until the present situation eases.

“Consular assistance is no longer available within Iraq,” the government said.

For those who were already in Iraq, Baghdad International Airport and Erbil International Airport remain open and most commercial airlines continue to operate. However, flights departing Erbil are heavily booked. Australians are strongly advised to make arrangements to depart immediately.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: decapitated, Mosul

Iraq This is what could happen if the Islamic State destroys the Mosul Dam

August 8, 2014 By administrator

By Thomas Gibbons-Neff

Washington Post

Mosul-damA general view shows the Mosul dam on the Tigris River. (AFP PHOTO/AHMAD AL-RUBAYEAHMAD AL-RUBAYE/AFP/Getty Images)

If , as some reports suggest, Islamic State forces have seized Mosul Dam, they might have stumbled on a weapon exponentially more powerful than any U.S.-made armored vehicle or Soviet-era anti-aircraft gun.

The Mosul Dam is Iraq’s largest dam and with its shoddy construction could, if destabilized, affect the lives of Iraqis as far south as Baghdad.

Located on Mosul Lake the facility provides electricity and irrigation to surrounding areas.

“If the dam fails, scientists say, Mosul could be completely flooded within hours and a 15-foot wall of water could crash into Baghdad,” Keith Johnson wrote in a Foreign Policy article from earlier this summer.

A 2011 article from the International Water Power and Dam Construction magazine indicated that if the Mosul Dam was destroyed the ensuing destruction could result in half a million deaths.

In July the Islamic State took the Nuaimiyah Dam in Western Iraq, and now with the seizure of the Mosul Dam, its control of critical infrastructure presents a huge challenge for the the Iraqi government.

In a 2007 letter to Iraqi Prime minister Nouri al-Maliki from then commanding General of the U.S. Army David Petraeus and U.S. ambassador to Iraq Ryan Crocker, the two Americans warned that the structure, built in the 1980s, had been erected on an unstable foundation of soil and was “at great risk of failure.”

Johnson described Iraq’s dams as the country’s “soft underbelly in the fight against ISIS. ”

Iraqi forces remain in control of Haditha Dam. That structure, a sprawling hydro-electric facility located to the south west of Baghdad in Al-Anbar province, was a key focus of coalition efforts during the Iraq war. For most of the U.S. occupation of the country a large contingent of Marines were physically garrisoned within the structure.

“Using [the] Haditha [dam], ISIS could flood farmland and disrupt drinking water supplies like it did with a smaller dam near Fallujah this spring,” Johnson wrote, referring to a flood that displaced more than 50,000 people between Fallujah and Abu Ghraib.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: dam, ISIL, Mosul

Lebanese Churches Struggle with Flood of Iraqi Christians

August 8, 2014 By administrator

BEIRUT, Lebanon — Lebanese churches are struggling to handle the influx of hundreds of Christian families who fled Mosul after Islamic extremists seized Iraq’s second-largest city, threatening Christians and other 58152Image1minorities.

About 600 Iraqi families have fled to the Lebanese capital of Beirut in recent weeks.

“When you hear what has happened to them, you want to help,” said a Lebanese woman who donated food to a Chaldean center in the Hazmiye neighborhood of Beirut.

Donations from Lebanese are pouring in after a plea for aid went viral. Basic foods like rice, beans, oil, tea and sugar has been delivered the Chaldean center in the past few days.

Beirut already was a place of refuge for Assyrian and Chaldean Christians from Iraq; some 1400 families have been registered since 2003. But in the past 10 days another 600 families are said to have arrived, mainly fleeing after threats of the radicals of the Islamic State (IS/formerly ISIS).

Stories about Christians in Mosul being forced to convert to Islam or die have shocked their fellow believers in Lebanon. Christians in IS controlled areas of Syria have faced a similar fate and sought refuge in Lebanon.

The Chaldean Bishop secretariat is overwhelmed by phone calls offering help and is turning away clothing donations. Food and money to pay for housing and medical care are the top priorities.

The Lebanese Chaldean Church has tried to find housing for refugees from Syria and Iraq, and helps with the rent if the refugees cannot pay for themselves. Because IS seized the refugees’ belongings when they fled Mosul, the needs are high.

Yet some have difficulty asking for support, said Father George of the Saint Georges Assyrian Church in Beirut. “They had shops, money, and a good life. It is very hard for them to ask for help.”

He helped one homeless Christian family of four find housing — $1,200 for a one-bedroom apartment. The landlord, he said with disappointment, is also Christian.

While he is searching for a better, cheaper place for this family, the priest said the community is overwhelmed by the needs of refugees. Lebanon is hosting 1.1 million Syrian refugees, the most of any country.

“Even for Christian organizations it is not easy. Most Christians now are helped by the local community. The Lebanese government offers no help; our demolished country is not able to,” he said.

Lebanon’s churches were already having a hard time meeting the needs of Syrian Christians, and the new flood of refugees from Iraq is creating an even bigger challenge, said Paula Acceri of Gestures From The Heart, a small, local NGO has tried to help Christians from Mosul.

Even though donations are pouring in many do not reach those refugees that need it most, according to the NGO, which tries to connect the needy with churches.

“We help the worst cases (and) give them some money for rent. We will talk to the Ministry of Education to find an empty school building we can use to house refugees,” Acceri said.

After a recent Sunday service, Iraqi Christians gathered outside the Chaldean Church of Saint Joseph.

One woman who asked not to be identified recounted how she fled and her family fled their village of Batnaya, near Mosul, in the middle of the night for the Kurdistan Region capital, Erbil. Her husband couldn’t find his passport so stayed behind while she continued on with the children to Beirut, where her sisters live.

“We were caught in the fight between IS and the Peshmerga,” she said. “Now the village is empty.”

“We feel squeezed in the middle,” said Mowfak Keriakos, 54, who fled Baghdad a month ago after being harassed by police for celebrating Christian holidays and because his daughter was forced to veil.

He did not flee to Iraqi Kurdistan because he feels the Kurds are not welcoming Christians and he doesn’t believe he’ll find work there.

“They did not protect Nineveh; otherwise the Christians would not have fled,” he said.

Instead, Keriakos wants to join his brothers and his son in the United States. Many Iraqi Christians want to emigrate to the west and France offered refuge to Christians from Mosul last week.

Father George of the Assyrian Church is saddened by the prospect of so many Christians leaving the Middle East. He wants to set up a $1 million campaign to buy land for Christians in the region, and called on the west to stop taking refugees.

“The United Nations and Europe are too quiet,” he said. “They must help Christians in Iraq and Syria so they don’t have to leave.”

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Christians, help, Lebanese churches, Mosul

ISIL militants seize Iraq largest Christian town, And Pope Francis called on world governments to protect Christians in Iraq.

August 7, 2014 By administrator

Takfiri ISIL militants have taken control of Iraq’s largest Christian town and its surrounding areas, forcing thousands of civilians to leave the region.

374426_Iraq-attackOn Thursday, the ISIL terrorists seized Bakhdida town, also known as Qaraqosh, in Iraq’s northern province of Nineveh following the retreat of Kurdish troops from the semi-autonomous Kurdistan region, who had been protecting the area for the past two months.

The terrorists also took control of Tal Keef, Bartella and Karamlesh, all located near the militant-held city of Mosul.

Christian patriarchs say the ISIL militants removed church crosses and burned manuscripts there.

An estimated 100,000 Christians have been forced to flee from Nineveh Province into the Kurdistan region.

“Most of the displaced are now living in the open and face the threat of death because of scorching heat and lack of water and food,” said Chaldean Catholic Patriarch Louis Raphael Sako, adding, “It is a humanitarian disaster.”

Pope Francis has called on world governments to take measures to protect Christians in Iraq.

The UN Security Council will hold an emergency meeting, requested by France, later in the day to discuss the situation in Iraq.

Meanwhile, the ISIL militants seized the country’s largest dam near the city of Mosul after a week of fighting against Kurdish forces. The militants are now in control of huge power and water resources and have access to the river that runs through the capital, Baghdad.

The militant group posted a statement online, confirming the seizure of the dam and promising to continue “the march in all directions.” The ISIL cult also claimed that it would not “give up the great Caliphate project.”

UN also said that some 40,000 Iraqis from the Kurdish minority Yazidi have reportedly taken refuge in nine different locations on Mount Sinjar in northwest Iraq.

Violence erupted in Iraq when ISIL Takfiri militants took control of Mosul on June 10, which was followed by the takeover of Tikrit, located 140 kilometers (87 miles) northwest of the capital, Baghdad.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Christians, ISIL, Mosul, pop

Tragic situation in northern Iraq, children are dying of thirst

August 7, 2014 By administrator

arton102140-431x355Jihadists have seized Qaraqosh, the largest Christian town in Iraq near Mosul (north), and abandoned in the night by Kurdish forces surrounding areas, reported Thursday the fleeing inhabitants and a religious leader.

“I know now that the cities of Qaraqosh, Tal kayf, Bartella and Karamlesh were emptied of their inhabitants and are now under the control of insurgents,” said Bishop Joseph Thomas, Chaldean archbishop of Kirkuk and Sulaymaniyah.

The decision by the jihadists of areas of northern Iraq where there were a large part of the country’s Christians Thursday pushed tens of thousands of people to flee, announced an archbishop and witnesses.

“This is a disaster, a tragic situation. We call on the Security Council of the UN to intervene immediately. Tens of thousands of terrified people are forced from their homes when we speak, we can not describe what is happening, “said Bishop Joseph Thomas.

Reuters and AFP

According to UNICEF, several dozen children Yezidi died of thirst in the Kurdish mountains.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: children, dying, ISIS, Mosul, thirst

Iraq Christians flee as Islamic State takes Qaraqosh

August 7, 2014 By administrator

qaraqoshUp to a quarter of Iraq’s Christians are reported to be fleeing after Islamic militants seized the minority’s biggest town in the country, the BBC reported.

The Islamic State (IS) group captured Qaraqosh in Nineveh province overnight after the withdrawal of Kurdish forces.

Meanwhile, the UN says some of the 50,000 members of the Yazidi religious minority trapped by IS on Mount Sinjar have been rescued.

IS controls parts of Iraq and Syria and says it has created an Islamic state.

Nineveh, located 400km (250 miles) north-west of Baghdad, is home to a large number of religious minorities.

Tens of thousands have been forced to flee since IS, a Sunni Muslim group formerly known as Isis, launched their onslaught in the north in June.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Christians, ISIS, Mosul, qaraqosh

Yezidi MP in Iraq: ‘We Are Being Slaughtered’ (Video)

August 6, 2014 By administrator

yezidi-children Children are among the tens of thousands stuck for days in the Shingal mountains, where dozens have already died of starvation and thirst. Photo: Rudaw

BAGHDAD, Iraq – A Yezidi MP in the Iraqi parliament broke down in tears as she pleaded for immediate help for thousands from her community stuck for days on an arid mountain, where more than 60 children and the elderly have died of starvation and thirst. report Rudaw

“We are being slaughtered under the banner of ‘there is no God but Allah,’” Vian Dakhil told MPs, referring the families who fled to the outskirts of Shingal, which fell to Islamic State (IS/ISIS) militants on Saturday.

In tears, Dakhil said that an entire religion is being exterminated by the Islamic zealots, who remain holed up in Shingal under heavy fire from Peshmerga forces.

“There is now a campaign of genocide being waged on the Yazidis,” Dakhil said.

“Brothers, leave all political disputes aside, we want humanitarian solidarity!  Speak here in the name of humanity: save us! save us!” Dakhil appealed.

She added that, “Thirty-thousand families are besieged in the Shingal mountains without water and food. They are dying. Seventy babies have died,” she said.

“Our women are taken as slaves and sold in the slave market,” Dakhil said, referring to the IS practice of taking women as war booty.

Yezidi leaders have continued to seek international help for the tens of thousands displaced by the ongoing fighting and are at imminent risk of death.

They have reported that over the past three days the militants have killed many from the community and taken 500 Yezidi women as hostages. IS fighters have posted pictures of dead Yezidis on the Internet.

Earlier this week, Kurdish President Massoud Barzani vowed to “defend Shingal and our Yezidi brothers and sisters.”

IS fighters, who have already driven out Christians from their ancestral homes in northern Iraq – including Zumar — have been especially targeting the Yezidis, a gentle community they consider to be “devil worshipers.”
The United Nations has called the situation in Shingal and other parts of Nineveh province “a humanitarian disaster.” 
With no Iraqi forces left in those regions, the Kurdish Peshmerga fighters remain the only barrier between the militants and the Kurdish community of Yezidis and Christians in the province.

On Monday, Barzani ordered more than 10,000 Kurdish fighters into an offensive against IS, which has declared an Islamic Caliphate in captured territories in Iraq and Syria, with its capital in Mosul. Iraq’s second-largest city fell to the militants in June.
 
 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Mosul, slaughtered, yesidi

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