Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Iraqi PM condemns jihadist threat

- SAMEER N. YACOUB AND SINAN SALAHEDDIN

BAGHDAD — Iraq’s prime minister on Sunday condemned the Islamic State extremist group’s actions targeting Christians in territory it controls, saying the jihadists’ actions reveal the threat they pose to the minority community’s “centuries-old heritage.”

The comments from Nouri al-Maliki came a day after the expiration of a deadline imposed by the Islamic State group calling on Christians in the militant-held city of Mosul to convert to Islam, pay a tax or face death. Most Christians opted to flee to the nearby Kurdish region or other areas protected by Kurdish security forces.

“What is being done by the Daesh terrorist gang against our Christian citizens in Nineveh province, and their aggression against the churches and houses of worship in the areas under their control reveals beyond any doubt the extremist criminal and terrorist nature of this group,” al-Maliki said in a statement released by his office, using the Arabic acronym for the Islamic State group.

“Those people, through their crimes, are revealing their true identity and the false allegation­s made here and there about the existence of revolution­aries among their ranks.”

At the Vatican, Pope Francis expressed his concern Sunday for Mosul’s Christians, offering prayers for Iraqi Christians who “are persecuted, chased away, forced to leave their houses without the possibilit­y of taking anything” with them.

Residents in Mosul also say the Islamic State group’s fighters recently have begun to occupy churches and seize the homes of Christians who have fled the city.

These actions stem from the harsh interpreta­tion of Islamic law the group seeks to impose on the territory it controls in Iraq and neighbouri­ng Syria.

Already in Mosul, the extremist group has banned alcohol and water pipes, and painted over street advertisem­ents showing women’s faces. It has, however, held off on stricter punishment­s so far.

Iraq’s Christian communitie­s date back to the first centuries of the religion. Before the 2003 U.S.-led invasion, about 1 million Christians called Iraq home. But since then, the community has been a frequent target for militants, and attacks prompted many Christians to leave the country. Church officials now estimate the community at about 450,000.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon strongly condemned “the systematic persecutio­n of minority population­s in Iraq by Islamic State and associated armed groups,” in particular the recent threats against Christians in Mosul, according to a statement released Sunday.

Ban also expressed concern about abductions and killings of minority Yazidis, Turkmens and Shabaks, and reiterated that targeting a population because of its ethnic background or faith could constitute a crime against humanity.

He also said the U.N. would intensify its efforts to address the urgent humanitari­an needs of the displaced.

Prime Minister Al-Maliki, who has ruled the country since 2006, is under pressure to step aside and not seek a third consecutiv­e term. Many in Iraq accuse al-Maliki’s Shiite-led government of helping fuel the crisis by failing to promote reconcilia­tion with the Sunni Muslim minority, and say he has become too polarizing a figure to unite the country and face down the militant threat.

Iraq’s new parliament elected a new speaker last week — the first step toward forming a new government.

 ?? SAFIN HAMED/Getty Images ?? Iraqi Christians receive communion during a mass at the Saint-Joseph church in Irbil, the capital of the autonomous Kurdish region of northern Iraq. Hun
dreds of Christian families fled their homes in Mosul after the jihadist Islamic state told them...
SAFIN HAMED/Getty Images Iraqi Christians receive communion during a mass at the Saint-Joseph church in Irbil, the capital of the autonomous Kurdish region of northern Iraq. Hun dreds of Christian families fled their homes in Mosul after the jihadist Islamic state told them...

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