Blasts hit Christian houses of worship
Two churches and a nun convent came under fire of
mortars and explosive charges in Baghdad Sunday, leaving
two casualties and material damage, a media source from
the Democratic Assyrian Movement said.
The attacks against Christian houses of worship in
Baghdad on Sunday came coordinated with four attacks
against churches and a convent in Mosul .
"An explosive device went off in front of Mar Gorges
(Saint George) church for Chaldeans, wounding the church
guard and causing material damage to the church," a
media source from the Democratic Assyrian Movement, who
requested anonymity, told the independent news agency
Voices of Iraq (VOI).
He added "a mortar round landed onto the Roman Catholics
church in al-Riyadh neighbourhood, eastern Baghdad,
wounding the church guard and causing material damage to
the church".
The source pointed out "three mortar rounds targeted a
nun convent in Zufuraniya, southern Baghdad, leaving no
casualties and causing material damage to the convent
building".
The three explosions came in a wave of attacks
against Christian houses of worship, coinciding with the
Christians' New Year celebrations according to the
Gregorian calendar adopted by the Old Church of the
Eastern Orthodox Christians.
In Mosul city, northern Iraq, four explosions targeted
three Christian churches and a convent , leaving some
casualty and material damage to buildings.
"Two explosive devices went off near Saint Maskinta
church on Sunday afternoon, destroying the external wall
of the church, and leaving no casualty," a Ninewa police
source, who requested anonymity, told the independent
news agency Voices of Iraq (VOI).
He added "the blast was the fourth in a wave of attacks
targeting the Christian houses of worship and coming a
day before the New Year's celebrations for Orthodox
Christian sect tomorrow".
Bishop Faraj Raho, Christian Chaldeans bishop in Mosul ,
told the independent news agency Voices of Iraq (VOI)
"the two charges were planted in front of the Bishopric
adjacent to Saint Maskinta church".
Two
explosive devices went off near Saint Maskinta
church on Sunday afternoon, destroying the external
wall of the church, and leaving no casualty
a Ninewa police
"The bishopric was turned into an orphanage for
girls", he pointed out, "and the blast startled 30 girls
and the nuns living in the orphanage".
Earlier, a Ninewa army and police sources told VOI three
blasts went off near three Christian houses of worship.
Brig. Hajji Maher, the deputy commander of the Iraqi
army's 2nd Division, told the independent news agency
Voices of Iraq (VOI) that an explosive device blew up on
Sunday afternoon, targeting a Catholic convent in Mosul
al-Jadida neighborhood, western Mosul , leaving no
casualties.
A Ninewa police source told VOI a car bomb went off near
the Virgin Mary Church of Assyrian Christians, in al-Shohadaa
neighborhood, eastern Mosul, leaving four civilians
wounded and severely damaging the church gate.
He added the blast that smashed the church windows and
caused damage to four houses adjacent to the church was
the second attack targeting Christian houses of worship.
The Ninewa police command chief had earlier told VOI a
car bomb went off near the church of Mario Bulus ( Saint
Paul ) in al-Mohandessin neighborhood, northern Mosul,
on Sunday afternoon but left no casualties.
He added the blast only caused damage to the church
fence.
According to official figures, there were an estimated
1.2 million Christians in Iraq before the U.S.-led
invasion in 2003. Half of this number has left the
country while others have been forced by gunmen to
relocate to other areas.
Their numbers could reach now 750,000, according to
unofficial statistics.
Mosul , the capital of the mixed-population province of
Ninewa , is 402 km north of Baghdad .