Bangkok Post

After 2 years under IS, church reopens

-

BASHIQA: The bells have rung out after two years of silence in the Mar Korkeis church in the town of Bashiqa, some 15km north of Mosul, the Islamic State’s last major city stronghold in Iraq.

Kurdish Peshmerga fighters retook the town on Nov 7, ending two years of rule by the hardline Sunni group which persecuted Christians and other minorities in the Nineveh plains, one of the world’s oldest centres of Christiani­ty.

Women trilled to celebrate the moment when a new crucifix was erected on the church, replacing one that was broken by the militants.

The town is largely empty as the Peshmerga have not finished clearing explosives and mines left behind by the insurgents in their fight against US-backed Iraqi and Kurdish forces who launched an offensive on Mosul on Oct 17.

“We want people to be patient and not to return here until we completely clear the area, as we want to ensure their safety,” said Peshmerga Brig Gen Mahram Yasin.

After seizing the Nineveh plains in 2014, the IS issued an ultimatum to Christians: pay a tax, convert to Islam, or die by the sword.

Most abandoned their homes and fled to the nearby autonomous Kurdish region.

The priest at the Mar Korkeis church, Father Afram, said that he would prefer Bashiqa to remain under the control of the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) and not revert to the Iraqi central government in Baghdad, which is about 400km to the south.

“Of course we would prefer to be part of the KRG, because of our proximity to the area and because, for the past 13 years, the regional government has been looking after us,” he said.

“Nobody from Baghdad came here to say hello, at all,” since the US-led invasion that toppled Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein, he said.

Christiani­ty in northern Iraq dates back to the first century AD.

The number of Christians has fallen sharply during the violence which followed the 2003 toppling of Hussein and the IS takeover of Mosul two years ago saw the city purged of Christians for the first time in two millennia.

From a Mosul mosque in 2014, IS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi declared a “caliphate” that spanned parts of Iraq as well as Syria.

The recapture of Mosul would mark the effective defeat of the group i n Iraq.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand