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FOUR CHRISTIAN WOMEN KILLED IN IRAQ, OTHERS INJURED (muslims)
Assist News Service ^ | Iraq Monday, January 26, 2004 | Stefan J. Bos

Posted on 01/27/2004 9:43:39 PM PST by miltonim

As violence against Christians and Americans spreads



BAGHDAD, IRAQ  (ANS) -- Four Christian women were killed and five others injured when militants in a passing car raked their minibus with gunfire 80 kilometers (50 miles) west of Baghdad, an informed human rights watchdog confirmed Monday, January 26.

Barnabas Fund, which has close contacts with Christians in Iraq, said the attack happened last Wednesday, January 21, when nine Christian Iraqi women were on their way to work in the laundry at the Habaniyah American military base.

"Suddenly four masked men in a white Opel machine-gunned our minibus and four women died" Barnabas Fund quoted survivor Maggi Aziz, 49, as saying.

None of the passengers escaped without injuries, explained Barnabas Fund, adding that Aziz herself was speaking from her hospital bed with wounds to the leg, shoulder and head.

Among those killed was Ashkik Varojan, who boarded the bus on Wednesday morning having decided to hand in her resignation, rather than live in fear of reprisals for cooperating with the United States-led coalition, Barnabas Fund said.

PARALYZED HUSBAND

"Necessity had driven her to work to support her paralyzed husband and four children. On hearing the news of her death, Anjel, her 20 year old daughter fainted with grief.

Vera Ibrahim, who survived, told Barnabas Fund that she "won't continue" her work. "I am afraid. They wanted to kill us all," she reportedly said.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility, although church leaders, individual Christians and human rights workers have told ASSIST News Service (ANS) in Iraq they are concerned about rising violence against Christians.

Survivor Suzanne Azat and Mussa Adam Abu Shaba, whose sister Nadia was killed, said they believe the assailants were insurgents fighting against coalition forces to whom Iraq's Christian minority has often been linked by Muslim militants.

SADDAM LOYALISTS

The United States administration has blamed several attacks on loyalists to former President Saddam Hussein, including militant Islamic fighters from neighboring countries.

Human rights workers have told ANS there is growing pressure on Christians to adhere to the rules of Iraq's Muslim Shi'ite majority, with reports that Christian women have been forced to wear veils in cities such as Basra.

Earlier this month a mass demonstration in Baghdad led by Shi'ite leader Grand Ayatollah Ali Al-Sistani against American political plans for the region showed some demonstrators carrying pictures of Jesus, monitored Barnabas Fund.

DIRECT ELECTIONS?

The organization said it was an effort to make it appear Christians were supporting the Shi'ite group, "although virtually all Christian leaders" are against Al-Sistani's policies. The Shi'ite Muslim leader is demanding direct elections before the transfer of power from the American -led coalition, and his followers have staged huge marches in support of the demand.

But Washington says there is not enough time to organize free and fair elections before the end of June, although both the Bush administration and the U.S.- appointed Iraqi Governing Council in Baghdad have asked the United Nations to study the ballot question.

Despite the pressure and daily violence Iraqi Christians risk their lives, racing through the streets between gun fire, to visit often overcrowded churches, ANS established in Iraq.

American soldiers, which include many Christians, and other coalition supporters also continue to be under attack, ANS monitored Monday January 26.

ROADSIDE BOMB

The Voice of America (VOA) and other media reported that a roadside bomb killed an Iraqi man as he stepped off a bus in the town of Ramadi, west of Baghdad, just hours after gunmen killed four Iraqi policemen at a checkpoint in the same area.

Three other people were wounded in Monday's attack, which came after a series of bombings in recent days which brought the death toll to over 500 among American soldiers since hostilities began.

The same cumulative toll of 500 deaths was reached in Vietnam in 1965, the year when the U.S. deployment there rose to 184,300 troops from 23,300, according to several reports.

Most soldiers died in Iraq as a result of hostile action but more than 150 were killed in non-hostile causes, including suicide according to Defense Department sources.




TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: intimidation; iraq; iraqichristians; iraqiwomen; islam; mohammedans; muslims; oppression; persecution; terror
Muhammad-inspired persecution of Christians, Jews and all non-Muslims continues...

Mohammed, The Mad Poet Quoted....
1 posted on 01/27/2004 9:43:40 PM PST by miltonim
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Comment #2 Removed by Moderator

To: JackRyanCIA
Cowardly dogs!
3 posted on 01/27/2004 10:05:11 PM PST by claudiustg (Go Sharon! Go Bush!)
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To: miltonim
Let me say it again.

We need to get some Kurds and use them to police the Sunni triangle. We'll see how tough the terrorists are then.

When incidents like this and the current spate of bombings occur, there needs to be some kind of lockdown, including the closure of mosques, to make the continued support of these terrorists unpalatable.

Places like Fallujah need to have their male population dispersed to the Shiite areas of the country as a warning to others that these bombings will no longer be tolerated.

It is bad enough that our soldiers are sitting targets now, but there is no need to not allow them a fighting chance to defend themselves.

The Iraqi people will have to make a choice to fight for their own freedom. Otherwise, all we have done will vanish when we leave.

Make no mistake about it---these terrorists fully intend to influence the outcome of the November elections. It is time to be tough now, not six months from now.
4 posted on 01/28/2004 12:23:19 AM PST by exit82 (Toll free number for the Capitol switchboard:1-800-648-3516--let your reps in DC know what you think)
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To: exit82
Thousands Turn Out To Denounce Violence, Ba’ath Party
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1066121/posts

MOSUL, Iraq (Jan. 26, 2004) – Over 2,000 members of the former Ba’ath party turned out at the Mosul Public Safety Academy to renounce their membership in the party, to denounce violence and to pledge support to a new, free and democratic Iraq.

The ceremony is the largest held in the Nineveh province to date.

Former officers in the Iraqi Army who were also Ba’ath party members filed into the academy and signed an agreement that disavowed their party affiliation and pledged to cooperate fully with the Coalition Provisional Authority in serving the people of Iraq.

Major Gen. David H. Petraeus, commanding general, 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault), spoke to the gathered former soldiers and praised them for stepping forward to forge a united Iraq.

Retired Brigadier Gen. Safawi Mumtiz of the former Iraqi Army, one of the events organizers said those in attendance want to reject violence and terrorism and work toward the future of Iraq.

“We hope that this will be a good reflection to other Ba’athists to participate in the process,” said Mumtiz.

Mumtiz said the only difficulty in organizing the event was in finding a facility big enough for their projected attendance.

Soldiers from the 101st Airborne Division worked to gain the trust of retired officers who reside in and around Mosul to show their willingness to form a new Iraq that provides opportunities to everyone, according to 1st Lt. Strauss Scantlin, 431st Civil Affairs Battalion.

The 101st facilitated the events to support reconciliation by former regime elements in order to ensure the democratic process includes all Iraqis who are willing to support a free, safe and democratic environment.

The ceremony is the first of two to be held in Mosul. Tomorrow, former noncommissioned officers in the Iraqi Army will come to the academy to renounce their membership and show their support for a new Iraq.

The 101st continues to work with the citizens and leaders of Iraq to make it a safe, prosperous, and democratic nation.

5 posted on 01/28/2004 9:48:51 AM PST by Valin (Politicians are like diapers. They both need changing regularly and for the same reason.)
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