The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Militants move Syrian Christians

Mass abductions adds to fears among religious minorities.

- By Zeina Karam

Associated Press BEIRUT — Islamic State militants moved a large group of Christians they abducted to one of their stronghold­s as fighting raged Wednesday between the extremists and Kurdish and Christian militiamen for control of a chain of villages along a strategic river in northeaste­rn Syria, activists and state-run media said.

The Khabur River in Hassakeh province, which borders Turkey and Iraq, has become the latest battlegrou­nd in the fight against the Islamic State group in Syria. It is predominan­tly Kurdish but also has population­s of Arabs and predominan­tly Christian Assyrians and Armenians.

In pre-dawn attacks, the Islamic State on Monday attacked communitie­s nestled along the river, seizing at least 70 people, including many women and children. Thousands of others fled to safer areas.

The fate of those kidnapped, almost all of them Assyrian Christians, remained unclear Wednesday, two days after they were seized. State-run SANA news agency and the Assyrian Network for Human Rights in Syria said the hostages have been moved to the Islamic State-controlled city of Shaddadeh, south of the city of Hassakeh.

The United States and a coalition of regional partners are conducting a campaign of airstrikes against the group, and have on occasion struck Shaddadeh, a predominan­tly Arab town.

“In addition to its strategy of terrifying people, taking hostages to use as human shields to protect from coalition airstrikes is another of its goals,” said Osama Edward, director of the Stockholm-based Assyrian Network for Human Rights in Syria.

The mass abduction added to fears among religious minorities in both Syria and Iraq, who have been repeatedly targeted by the Islamic State group. During the group’s bloody campaign in both countries, where it has declared a self-styled caliphate, minorities have been repeatedly targeted and killed or enslaved, driven from their homes and had their places of worship destroyed.

The Assyrians are indigenous Christian people who trace their roots back to the ancient Mesopotami­ans.

Younan Talia, a high ranking official with the Assyrian Democratic Organizati­on, said Islamic State militants had raided 33 Assyrian villages on Monday, picking up as many as 300 people along the way. Many were plucked from their beds at dawn. A man who refused to leave his home was set on fire along with his house.

Talia added that more than 700 families who fled Khabour region had arrived in Hasaskeh.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States