Iraqi Christians both fearful and optimistic

Immediate aid is needed for thousands facing grave danger in Mosul, writes Dale Gavlak

Dale Gavlak

Iraqi Christians are cautiously welcoming the start of the battle for Mosul and the Ninevah Plain, their ancestral homeland of the past 14 centuries from which they were brutally driven out by the Islamic State group more than two years ago. 

“They’ve been waiting for this day after being forced out in the summer of 2014, and many Christians have been living in very miserable conditions since. A number are eager to go back,” Fr Emanuel Youkhana told the Catholic News Service. The archimandrite, a member of the Assyrian Church of the East, heads the Christian Aid Program Northern Iraq, CAPNI.

“Of course the military operation is just the first of several phases paving the way for their return. They will need security and other guarantees before they go back,” Fr Youkhana said. “Also much reconstruction and rehabilitation of the region occupied by the Islamic State militants will need to take place.”

Humanitarian aid

This summer, the UN said that as the Mosul crisis evolves, up to 13 million people throughout Iraq may need humanitarian aid by the year’s end – far larger than the Syrian crisis. This would make the humanitarian operation in Mosul likely the single largest, most complex in the world in 2016.

Prior to the Iraqi military’s capitulation to a small group of Islamic State fighters in 2014, Mosul was inhabited by more than two million people. It’s believed that only about one million residents remain today. Some 130,000 have fled to other areas within Iraq, such as Kirkuk or Kurdistan. Thousands of others are being housed in neighbouring countries, such as Jordan and Lebanon, while perhaps hundreds have been resettled or are awaiting resettlement in the US, Australia and Canada. Some live in cramped conditions in church basements. Caritas and other Catholic organisations have been working to help them.

Establishment

International humanitarian organisations are warning that Iraqis, mainly Sunni Muslims, left in Mosul are “now in grave danger.” The Norwegian Refugee Council, Save the Children and others are urging the establishment of safe exit routes for civilians to flee the city. 

“Unless safe routes to escape the fighting are established, many families will have no choice but to stay and risk being killed by crossfire or bombardment, trapped beyond the reach of humanitarian aid with little food or medical care,” said Aram Shakaram, Save the Children’s deputy country director in Iraq.

“Those that try to flee will be forced to navigate a city ringed with booby traps, snipers and hidden land mines. Without immediate action to ensure people can flee safely, we are likely to see bloodshed of civilians on a massive scale,” Shakaram warned.

 

Uncertain future Even if the operation rids the area of Islamic State, Chaldean Catholic Archbishop Yousif Thomas Mirkis of Kirkuk said a number of Christians have serious concerns about returning home without iron-clad guarantees for their future safety. 

“Who can give such assurances? Maybe the big countries. But those who suffered the most are the Yazidis. The Yazidis and all the minorities face the same problem. How can we have peace with neighbors who looted our houses?” he asked.

He also expressed concerned for civilians inside Mosul. 

“All those children, elderly and civilians are caught like in a prison. We have to think about them too. We have to read the book of Jonah. It can explain many things to us,” the Catholic Chaldean leader said.

 

 

Unprepared
camps
brace
for
influx

Humanitarian groups have criticised instructions from Iraq’s military urging inhabitants to hunker down inside their homes.

At best, this is impractical in a brutal urban conflict, the groups say. At worst, it risks civilian buildings being turned into military positions and families being used as human shields, they argue.

But even if people do manage to flee the fighting, they also face some uncertainty. Although aid agencies have been preparing for months, observers believe camps for the internally displaced are ready for perhaps some 60,000 people, and these camps could be overwhelmed within days.