BAGHDAD, 3 May 2007 (IRIN) - Kamar
Anuar, a 44-year-old Christian, has abandoned his home after he
found a threatening letter in his garden, signed by an alleged
Islamist group, telling him to convert to Islam or leave the
country.
Anuar, a resident of Dora district,
one of the mainly Christian Baghdad neighbourhoods, has decided
to take refuge in a relative’s home in Kurdistan in the north.
“We [Christians] are at the end of
our tether because in four years of [US] occupation and
discrimination against our religion, we have never felt so
threatened,” said Anuar. “In my neighbourhood, every Christian
family has received threatening letters.”
Anuar is one of thousands of people
from minority groups who live in fear of their lives.
“I saw a family being killed in
front of me because they refused to leave their home. Insurgents
shot dead the couple, an elderly woman and two children, and
left a message by their side saying that it [the killing] was
just to show what would happen if any other [Christian] family
insisted on remaining in Dora district, which is already
populated by Sunni fighters,” Anuar added.
Alleged Islamists have said the
country should be cleansed of Christians as they support the
US-led occupation.
“This is a country of people who are
fighting against the US occupation and everyone who supports
them. Christians can leave Iraq without being hurt but if they
insist on staying, we don’t have any option but to kill them,”
said Abu Ahmed, who claims to be from a Sunni insurgent group
called Al-Qa’idah.
“We don’t support the US troops or
anyone who is destroying our country. Extremists have this idea
about us and we are paying for something we don’t believe in,”
Anuar said.
Forced to convert
According to the local Christian
Peace Association (CPA), the fatwa, issued by extremists and
distributed in every Christian neighbourhood, said that
Christians can only stay in their homes if they convert to
Islam.
“They want us to change our beliefs.
We are forbidden from going to churches or holding religious
meetings in our homes and our women are being forced to wear
abayas [the traditional full-length cloak that Muslim women
wear] when out in the streets,” said the Christian cleric and
spokesperson for the CPA, Lucas Barini.
“We have heard of cases of families
who were taken from their homes by extremists to convert them to
Islam. The brave ones who refused to convert were beheaded and
their mutilated bodies were later dumped in front of their
homes,” Barini said.
According to the CPA, about
600,000 Christians remain in Iraq, and make up less than 3
percent of the population.
Kidnapped children
The CPA said it had received
information that some Christian children, kidnapped over the
past two years, are being used by [Sunni] insurgents to fight [Shi’a]
militias and US troops.
“We cannot release the source [of
the information] for security reasons but we are sure about
these children. There are about 25 of them and, according to a
witness, they have been told that their families converted to
Islam but were killed by US troops and now they have to help
fight them,” Barini said.
Protection money
As the number of Christians in Iraq
continues to fall, many of them are being forced to pay
protection money to Shi’a militias or Sunni insurgents.
“The protection money has been
increasing and we cannot afford it any more. Each time we pay,
the following month they demand more,” said Rita Darnek, a
38-year-old Christian mother of four who is desperate to find a
way to flee the country.
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They
want us to change our beliefs. We are forbidden from
going to churches or holding religious meetings in
our homes and our women are being forced to wear
abayas when out in the streets.
|
“One of my neighbours in Baghdad’s
Ijidida neighbourhood refused to pay because he didn’t have the
money and they shot him dead together with his 13-year-old son,”
Darnek added.
Father Boris Burdati said families
who cannot pay the protection money are leaving for areas in
Kurdistan which are hosting Christians who fled from Mosul and
Baghdad.
“Many families are taking refuge in
A’ain camp, a few kilometres from the city of Arbil in the
Kurdish north and others are going to cities near the Syrian
border like Bashika,” said Burdati.
“They sought our help before leaving
as they couldn’t pay more protection money. Some families were
paying more than US$ 2,000 a month and using up all their
savings, so running away was a better way to ensure survival,”
he added.