(AsiaNews) There are numerous
children and Dominican nuns among the
wounded from yesterday’s suicide bombing
of the Christian village of Tell-el-skop(Telskuf),
north east of Mosul. Suicide attacks
targeting the North of the country have
sounded the alarm for religious leaders,
who now ask the Holy See for help.
“Find a way, a means to save us, the
Church in all of Iraq is in great
danger, we beg the Vatican to help us
bring our voice to the world”. It
almost seems like an ultimatum, these
words expressed by Msgr. Rabban al Qas,
Chaldean bishop of Amadiyah and Erbil,
in his reiteration of the Iraqi Catholic
Churches appeal launched yesterday
through AsiaNews l’appello,
following the increasingly ferocious
nature of attacks carried out against
Christians in the country.
The bishop speaks from Kurdistan,
upon till now an oasis of calm where
Iraq’s Christians could find refuge. He
speaks of the “frightening situation”
for the community in big cities and in
the small villages. Yesterday’s attack
on Tell-el-skop, where a car bomb was
exploded closet o the head quarters of
the Kurdistan Democratic Party, the
Kurdish political party lead by Massoud
Balzani, was not the first such attack.
The explosion seriously damaged the
nearby Dominican Convent and primary
school and kindergarten which the
sisters run. At least 10 people were
killed among them two children; among
the 140 wounded there are two
religious. A sister present at the time
of the blast said the explosion
terrorized the little ones, who up on
till now had never witnessed such
violence in their village.
According to local catholic sources
the spreading attacks on the north have
confessional origins: “they want to
attack Christians and religious
minorities to prove that there is
neither security plan, nor protection
barrier that the USA can build capable
of protecting them”. Political-economic
motivations are neither excluded: “We
will target Kurds along with Christians,
whose demands on Kirkuk’s oil reserves
are intolerable to many groups both in
Iraq and abroad” add the sources.
Either ways the areas suffering the
most at the moment remain Baghdad and
Mosul. Church sources in Baghdad
confirm that the “massacre” in the Dora
quarter, where armed Sunni groups kill
Shiites and impose conversion or exile
on the Christians, continues unabated.
Even Christians hopeful of a free and
peaceful Iraq now speak of “a country
without hope, for at least a further ten
years”.