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Iraq's minorities under fire

Posted on: July 11, 2014 1:16 PM
Christian families, like this one, are fleeing once more
Photo Credit: Louise Redvers/IRIN
Related Categories: Iraq, Middle East

ERBIL, 9 July 2014 (IRIN) - “The sound of the shelling was terrifying. In my street no-one was left. We were the last family to leave,” explained Janda, an Assyrian Christian from Iraq.

Her family of six fled the town of Qaragosh (also known as Bakhida and Hamdaniya) 30km east of Mosul, in northern Iraq, leaving their home in the middle of the night.

Travelling by car, they crossed into the capital of semi-autonomous Kurdistan, where they sought shelter in a sports hall in the mostly-Christian district of Ainkawa, in the Kurdish capital Erbil.

Janda is one of an estimated 10,000 Christians who fled from the Nineveh Plain - the region to the north and east of Mosul - to Erbil in the space of days in late June to escape militants from the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIS) and their clashes with Kurdish armed forces (Peshmerga). The aerial bombing campaign of the Iraqi Security Forces against ISIS has added to the concern.

“We are scared because we have heard rumours that ISIS decapitates people,” said Ammar, another Christian, who also left Qaragosh with his wife Iman and their two children, and found refuge in a cramped hall. “What happened to Christians in Syria - we expect the same fate,” he added.

Read the full article at http://www.irinnews.org/report/100325/analysis-iraq-s-minorities-under-fire