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http://www.worthynews.com/11689-mosul-iraqs-most-dangerous-city-for-christians

Mosul Iraq's 'Most Dangerous City' For Christians
Monday, August 20, 2012  (3:23 am)


MOSUL, IRAQ (Worthy News)– Mosul is now one of the most violent cities in Iraq 
with Christians and other minorities singled out for attacks and thousands 
continue to flee from the troubled nation, a Christian group said Thursday, 
August 16.

The attacks against Christians in Mosul and all of Iraq amount to 
"religicide," warned Carl Moeller, president of Open Doors USA, the 
American branch of the international Open Doors group.

"Christians in cities like Baghdad and Mosul are gripped by 
terrorism. They are fleeing in droves. Today it was reported that at 
least 20 people died in blasts and shootings across the country," he 
added.

Before 2003, Mosul was home to 75,000 Christians with some 70 percent belonging 
to the Chaldean Church, while the rest were Syriac Orthodox 
and Catholic, according Open Doors estimates. "Now approximately 25,000 
Christians live in Mosul, which has a population of 2 million. Many more 
Christians live in the surrounding Nineveh province," the organization 
added in a statement.

Christians have left the Iraqi city since 2003 when U.S. forces 
deposed Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein. The war triggered a wave of 
continuous violence in the second largest city in Iraq.


FORGOTTEN NATION?

"With the spotlight currently on Syria, Nigeria and Afghanistan and 
the pullout of U.S. troops from Iraq last December, Iraq has been placed on the 
back-burner," Moeller said. "But we as Christians in the West 
must continue to pray for our brothers and sisters in Iraq, who face 
extinction if we don't pray and advocate for them."

He said that almost no day passes without someone being killed by bombs or 
bullets in what is the capital of Nineveh province.

Besides Christians, policemen, soldiers or officials working for the government 
have also been killed.

"In the midst of all this, it's not difficult to find examples of 
growing hostility towards Christians" including in May when 20 families 
in Mosul received "threatening letters," Open Doors said. The letters 
reportedly warned them to move out of Mosul or face possible violence or 
kidnapping.

A Mosul Christian was quoted as saying that "terrorists in Mosul 
visited four real estate agents, asking the names of Christians who 
recently sold their houses." With this information, Open Doors said, 
"they know who has money and might be possible targets for kidnappings."


AGENT KILLED

One of the agents who refused to give information "to the terrorists 
was killed," Open Doors said. Also in Mosul, the house of a Christian 
was set on fire, and the police dismantled a bomb placed in the car of 
another Christian, according to the well-informed group.

General Ahmed M. Aljaboury, director general of the Mosul police said in 
published remarks that between 2005 and 2011 his forces "recorded 
the assassination of about 69 Christians, including university students, 
priests, female employees and housewives."

Two waves of reported killings and intimidation in 2008 and 2010 sent 
Christians fleeing from Mosul in such haste that the United Nations had to 
arrange emergency assistance. Thousands of Christians have fled to 
Turkey, Jordan, Europe and the United States.

Open Doors said that before the Gulf War in 1991 there were some 1 
million Christians in Iraq, ranked Number nine on its 2012 World Watch 
List of the "worst persecutors of Christians."

Yet, that number fell to some 750.000-850,000 in 2003, according to 
several Christian sources followed by Worthy News. Since then the 
numbers have "plummeted" claimed Open Doors, which estimates the number 
of Christians remaining in Iraq at 345,000. "However, the number 
decreases every month."


BIBLE DISTRIBUTION

Open Doors said that its role in Iraq includes distributing Bibles 
and Christian literature to churches and internally displaced people as 
well as supporting a project which translates literature, including the 
Bible, into the Kurdish languages.

It also provides training to church leaders, new Christians and leaders in 
trauma counseling, especially to children.

Christians in Iraq are among at least 100 million Christians who 
worldwide suffer interrogation, arrest and even death for their faith in 
Christ, "with millions more facing discrimination and alienation," Open Doors 
added.

The organization says it supports and strengthens believers in the 
world's most difficult areas through Bible and Christian literature 
distribution, leadership training and assistance as well as "Christian 
community development, prayer and presence ministry and advocacy on 
behalf of suffering believers."


Worthy News reprinted this article from its partner news agency BosNewsLife.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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