Posted on 03/02/2015 3:55:04 PM PST by NYer
Aleteia partner Aid to the Church in Need is reporting that some of the Assyrian Christians taken hostage by the Islamic State group last week have been released but that the fate of hundreds of others may depend on a Sharia court.
Quoting the London-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, ACN said 19 captives have been released18 were from the village of Tel Goran, one of the Assyrian Christian villages in Hassake governorate taken over by the Islamist group February 23. The Assyrian International News Agency (AINA) has photos of the released captives after they arrived at St. Marys Church in the town of Hassakah.
AINA says ISIS is still holding six-year-old Mariana Mirza. Her aunt on her fathers side has stayed behind with the girl, even though she had been granted her freedom. Marianas father, Abdo Mirza, was given a letter guaranteeing safe passage by the Islamic State and told to bring a ransom for his daughters release.
There are conflicting reports about the release of the hostages. AINA says their release followed three days of negotiations mediated by local Arab tribal leaders. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, meanwhile, says the release followed an Islamic State court order that 29 hostages be set free. ACNs contact in the region, Archimandrite Emanuel Youkhana, said that different sources reported a number of hostages had been taken to Mount Abdul Aziz, an area controlled by ISIS. He also said that a Sharia court in the town of Shadadi (about 40 miles south of Hassakah) is hearing the hostages cases according to Sharia law.
There is also dispute about reports last week that the Islamic State killed at least 15 Assyrian Christian hostages who were defending their villages. I contacted the vicar of the Chaldeans in Al Hassake, Fr Nidala. He told me that reports about Christians being killed [are] not true, Bishop Antoine Audo of Aleppo said.
Finally, ACN says the number of captives from Tel Shamiran are now said to be only 155 people, lower than previously believed, bringing the total number of captives to around 290.
Catholic ping!
There are a few theories as to what is going on:
1. Daesh is trying to collect ransom
2. Daesh is trying to establish a semblance of rational governance.
3. Daesh is trying to make minorities think they will be allowed to live within an Islamic State.
They have a pretty large population of Christians and other minorities within their territories, and are facing a large scale counter-attack this Summer by the Iraqi/Iranian/Syrian Armies, Jordanian/American/French Air Forces, Shia and Kurdish Militias, and the wrath of God. If all the minorities think it is an absolute life of death struggle for them against Daesh, they will fight hard and murder them to the last when the chance comes.
What a load of crap. North Africa and the Middle East. Of which Syria is a part, have been getting drier and turning to desert for over 2000 years now. North Africa used to be the breadbasket of Rome at the time of Christ 2000 years ago but now you cannot grow much more than an inbred, googley-eyed goat molesters there.
That is true. In Roman times they could cross the Sahara on horseback. 8,000 years ago it was swamp and jungle with hippos and such.
The area today is still capable of producing non-inbred goat molesters, but they just prefer not to.
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