New Report Shows Irrefutable Evidence of Genocide Against Christians by Islamic State
By Dan Wooding, Founder of ASSIST News Service
According to the Assyrian International News Agency (http://www.aina.org),
the nearly 300-page report, “Genocide against Christians in the Middle
East,” resulted from a US State Department request for specific evidence
related to crimes committed against Christians by ISIS.
Submitted
to Secretary of State John Kerry, the report was compiled from evidence
of a recent fact finding mission to Iraq, which documented the murder,
injury, enslavement and displacement that Christians have suffered at
the hands of the self-proclaimed Islamic State, also known as ISIS or
ISIL.
AINA
said that the announcement of the report’s release was made at a packed
National Press Club conference and included a panel of representatives
from IDC, the Knights of Columbus and other esteemed scholars and
activists as well as Christian clergy from United Kingdom and Iraq.
Ahead
of the press conference, IDC's President Toufic Baaklini said, “A
genocide designation by the United States cannot wait any longer. The
atrocities that commenced nearly two years ago have been broadcast to
the world, and the United States still stands silent as the
international community and the American people continue to raise their
voice.
Baaklini
continued that “It is time for the United States join the rest of the
world by naming the genocide and by taking action against it as required
by law.”
The
panelists also urged President Obama and Secretary Kerry to officially
designate the crimes being committed by Islamic State against Christians
as “genocide.”
So
far, the administration and State have been resistant to do so, said
Nina Shea, Director of the Hudson Institute's Center for Religious
Freedom. “Some State Department officials seem to believe that
Christians within ISIS territory are being respected as people of ‘the
Book’,” stated Shea.
As
the report demonstrates, she went on to say, Islamic State adheres to a
fundamentalist interpretation of Islam and believes that Christians
don’t qualify for the historic protection offered by Islamic law. The
notion that Christians are being given the option to pay the jizya tax
is ISIS propaganda. Christians cannot pay a tax when everything they
have has been taken by ISIS or when the price is extortionately high,
sometimes up to and including one's own children, as Johnnie Moore,
author of “Defying ISIS,” described. It is used by ISIS as a license to
rape, enslave, and pillage.
Shea
further stated, “At the same time the Secretary of State's staff has
contacted our organization and asked for a deal on word-smithing, asking
if it would be possible to designate ISIS’ actions as ethnic cleansing
or crimes against humanity rather than genocide.”
AINA
went on to say that the panelists decried such word-smithing,
vehemently reiterating that genocide is happening and the importance of
using the ‘g-word.’ They also pointed to evidence in the report, which
includes the names of the more than 1130 Christians that have been
murdered in Iraq from 2003 through June 2014.
“The
report has unearthed many stories that the world has not heard,”
Baaklini said in his statement announcing the release. “Like the story
of Christian women who have been forced into sexual slavery and listed
on ISIS slave menus that put a price on ‘Christian or Yazidi’ women by
age.” Baaklini continued, “Stories of women like Claudia, who was
captured and raped several times after ISIS militants spotted her tattoo
of a cross. Or like Khalia who fought ISIS militants off as they tried
to rape captive girls and take a nine-year-old as a bride.”
Panelists
who have recently visited the region described wholescale and systemic
elimination of Christian practice as well as the genocidal crimes they
witnessed.
“I
went to Iraq three weeks ago and met a three-year-old girl whom ISIS
members had thrown against a wall. She can no longer talk. Where was her
father? He had been murdered as he was a Christian,” stated Juliana
Taimoorazy, an Assyrian Christian and president of Iraqi Christian
Relief Council.
Shea
affirmed Taimoorazy's description of the crisis. “There are no open
churches, priests or clergy in ISIS territory and no right to practice,”
Shea stated. And Father Dankha, a priest from Erbil, said that if the
“United States waits any longer to designate the genocide none of my
people will be left.”
Bishop
Angaelos of the Coptic Orthodox Church held up the report showing the
audience the cover photo of the 21 Coptic Christian men who were
beheaded by ISIS in Libya, lamenting the loss of his fellow believers,
and said that “if we exclude Christians from the genocide designation we
risk putting them at greater risk.”
Dr.
Gregory Stanton, president of Genocide Watch and former president of
the International Association for Genocide Scholars, reiterated that
ISIS' actions must be identified as genocide, not only because it is
true but also because of the impact of the word itself. “The word
'genocide' packs moral force and requires action from our government,
which seems unwilling to truly confront ISIS,” said Stanton. He
continued “We refused to use the word in Rwanda and it resulted in
800,000 victims of genocide. Yet when we used the word with regards to
Kosovo and Bosnia, swift international action followed, which ended the
killing.”
Panelists
included Bishop Anba Angaelos of the Coptic Orthodox Church in the
United Kingdom; Father Douglas al-Bazi, former hostage, now a priest at
Mar Elia Refugee Camp in Erbil, Iraq; Prof. Bob Destro, Senior Law and
Policy Advisor, In Defense of Christians; Johnnie Moore, Author of
“Defying ISIS”; Nina Shea, Director of the Hudson Institute's Center for
Religious Freedom; Prof. Gregory Stanton, Founding President, Genocide
Watch; Juliana Taimoorazy, Founder and President, Iraqi Christian Relief
Council; and Rev. Dankha Joola of the Chaldean Archdiocese of Erbil,
Iraq.
Photo
captions: 1) A Muslim man appears to celebrate the brutal violence of
ISIS. 2) An elderly Syrian man about to decapitated by ISIS masked
executioner in a village just outside the ISIS' stronghold of Raqqa
while a large crowd looked on. 3) Nina Shea speaking at the National
Press Club. 4) Women protest against Islamic State’s barbaric violence
towards women. (Photo: Anadolu Agency/Dursun Aydemir) 5) Dan Wooding
reporting from outside the Kurdistan Parliament in Erbil, Northern Iraq.
** You may republish this or any of our ANS stories with attribution to the ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net).
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