Iraq’s abduction industry does not spare young women and girls.
Despite being released, some are unable to cope with the violence
they experienced and kill themselves. In Mosul a Syrian Orthodox
priest is kidnapped.
Baghdad (AsiaNews)
– Young Christian women and girls have been abducted and released
after ransom money was paid only to commit suicide because of the
shock, violence and shame they experienced. This is happening in
Baghdad where kidnapping has become a growth industry. Criminal
gangs are lining their pockets as the number of victims grows and
the line-ups at border posts grow even longer with people trying to
flee the country.
Christians from any denominations, clergy or laity
alike, are one of the preferred targets in the capital.
In Mosul on Monday, another priest was abducted, Fr
Paulos Eskandar, from the Syrian Orthodox Church. A huge ransom has
already been asked.
Sources in some communities of nuns in Baghdad have
relayed other stories they witnessed. Last Sunday two young
Christian women were abducted but under different circumstances: one
at home as her helpless family could do nothing but watch; the
other, at an open market where four armed men spirited her away in a
car leaving behind a distraught mother.
Often incidents do not end with the prisoner’s
release. In one case in Baghdad, the victim committed suicide after
the ransom was paid and she went home because of the torture and
sexual violence she suffered.
In another case, a young woman talked to her family
by phone (the kidnappers allowed her to speak to her family to
reassure them that she was alive) and told them: “I’m dead”
(referring to being gang raped). She eventually committed suicide
whilst still in the hands of her tormenters.
Unofficial estimates put the number of young women
and girls abducted in the last two weeks at 12.
Meanwhile Iraqi Christians
are increasingly scared. Sources in northern Iraq told AsiaNews
that “hundreds of families are on the run, fleeing towards the
border with Syria.”