Christians may have to wait ‘Many years’ before Mosul is stable enough for their return
By Michael Ireland, Senior Correspondent, ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net)
MOSUL, IRAQ (ANS -- January 30, 2017) --
A leading researcher has warned that Christians and other non-Sunni
Muslims from Mosul, northern Iraq, waiting to return after their city’s
liberation from Islamic State (IS) is completed may have many years to
wait, and their chances of doing so depend on the actions of the Iraqi
Government.

Speaking
in London on Jan. 25, Winter said: “there is no such thing as a post-IS
world,” and added that ideological measures will be needed after
military victory is achieved, to address ongoing levels of sympathy for
the group and its supremacist aims.
Asked
what measures would be necessary for the city’s diverse non-Muslim
communities to return to Mosul, he replied that it’s vital that the
Shia-led Iraqi Government shows they care about the population who lived
under the group’s occupation, and rebuild what was lost.
The
rise of IS came amidst disaffection among Iraqi Sunnis, which increased
during the premiership of Nouri al-Maliki, who centralized power around
himself.
He added that the city’s civilian population is now “less supportive” than it used to be.
However,
Mr. Winter warned that if the Iraqi Government continues to fail to
look beyond sectarian divisions and provide for its citizens equally,
stability will be “many, many years” away. He said he believes IS will
be defeated in western Mosul in the next few months, but that it will
focus on insurgency tactics to undermine Baghdad and “salvage some sort
of momentum” for the group.
Winter
was also sharply critical of US President Donald Trump’s pre-election
pledge to “bomb the hell out of ISIS.” He suggested that believing the
problem requires only a military response is “damaging” and will be
exacerbated by a “foolish and naïve and superficial” understanding of
the issue.
The
Middle East Advocacy Coordinator for global charity Open Doors, which
supports Christians under pressure for their faith around the world,
said: “Open Doors believes that equal citizenship, dignity in different
aspects of life and enhanced and inclusive peace and reconciliation
efforts – which give faith-based organizations a leading role – are the
key three elements for achieving sustainable peace in Mosul and
Nineveh.”
‘Iraq needs Christians’
The
report begins: “When Christianity spread across what we now call the
Middle East and we see that since then until now Christians have
contributed to societies in literacy, in health, in translating and
contributing to the Arabic language. Some of the best early centers of
learning in the world were founded by Christians. Christians were among
the first to introduce charitable works and NGOs. We see them involved
in politics, and in the development of the Iraqi state. Christians are
among the most well-known business people. And in the future Christians,
alongside other numerical minorities, are vitally important for the
stability of [Iraq]. Policy-makers and researchers agree that we need to
maintain diversity in order to counter extremism and radicalization. We
need diversity to ensure sustainable peace and lasting stability in the
Middle East.”
The
coordinator said the way that Open Doors is tackling these issues,
involves working with indigenous church leaders, engaging with
governments and decision-makers across the globe, and trying to collect
One Million Voices in a petition in support of a campaign to bring “Hope
to the Middle East.”
Photo
captions: 1) Iraqi forces have been fighting IS in the streets of Mosul
(CNN). 2) Islamic State marches into Mosul. 3) Charlie Winter. 4)
Michael Ireland
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