The Borneo Post

Iraqi girl reunited with family three years after IS abduction

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ARBIL, Iraq: The Ashti camp in Iraq’s northern city of Arbil celebrated thereturn ofagirl whose abduction by jihadists three years ago sent shockwaves through her Christian community.

Joy filled the prefab unit that is now the home of six-year- old Christina Ezzo Obada’s family, who were forced to flee the town of Qaraqosh, which lies between Arbil and Mosul and was taken over by the Islamic State group in mid-2014.

“Seeing my daughter is a miracle. I was shocked because she has changed so much, I didn’t recognise her,” said her 46-yearold mother Aida. They were on a bus with other displaced people when jihadist fighters took her daughter from her in August 2014.

More than five months after her abduction by IS, Aida heard through acquaintan­ces that her daughter had ended up with a family of 12 in the Tenek neighbourh­ood of west Mosul.

Iraqi forces retook all of east Mosul earlier this year and have been battling die-hard jihadists in west Mosul since February.

Christina’s mother told AFP that she had been receiving intermitte­nt informatio­n about her daughter but had never managed to talk to her directly.

The family Christina lived with fled Mosul recently and on Thursday night, the little girl’s eldest brother Elias received a phone call asking him to pick up his sister from another location in the city. The family Aida described as having ‘adopted’ Christina told her they found the girl alone and crying near a mosque more than two years ago.

More than 120,000 members of Iraq’s dwindling Christian minority had to flee their homes when IS swept through the Nineveh Plain east of Mosul in August 2014. Christina’s disappeara­nce had rallied support around the plight of the community, which has yet to return to its towns and villages, most of which were retaken from IS months ago.

Friends, relatives and neighbours crowded their modest camp dwelling Saturday but the reunion wasn’t easy for Aida, whose daughter did not recognise her.

“She did not remember anything, she was used to being with the family she was with,” she said, as Christina, wearing a wooden crucifix around her neck, looked at the guests around her.

“We will try to bring back those memories for her and remind her that I am her real mother,” she said.

The young girl did not talk to anyone but smiled when she opened all the gifts that wellwisher­s and charity organisati­ons brought to the Ezzo family.

“We thank God, who saved her from Daesh, I would pray for her every day,” her blind father Khodhr said.

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? Christina plays with her brother inside a cramped home at a refugee camp in Erbil, Iraq.
— Reuters photo Christina plays with her brother inside a cramped home at a refugee camp in Erbil, Iraq.

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