Iraq church gives hope for Christians after Daesh atrocities

Patriarch Raphael Sako arrives to celebrate mass in the 80-year-old Chaldean Catholic Church of Um Al-Mauna in Mosul in northern Iraq. (AFP)
Patriarch Raphael Sako arrives to celebrate mass in the 80-year-old Chaldean Catholic Church of Um Al-Mauna in Mosul in northern Iraq. (AFP)
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Updated 07 April 2024
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Iraq church gives hope for Christians after Daesh atrocities

Iraq church gives hope for Christians after Daesh atrocities

MOSUL: With chants and ululations, Iraqi Christians celebrated the inauguration of a recently restored Chaldean Catholic Church in Mosul, years after extremists turned it into a religious police office.
Around 300 faithful attended the first mass in the 80-year-old church of Um Al-Mauna — “Our Lady of Perpetual Help” after it was fully renovated.
They prayed and took photos on mobile phones.
“I’ve been waiting for this day,” 74-year-old former school director Ilham Abdullah said.
“We hope that Christian families will come back and life will return to what it used to be” in Mosul, the capital of Nineveh province, home to one of the world’s oldest Christian communities.
Mosul, Iraq’s second city, has historically been among the Arab world’s most culturally diverse cities — a place of mosques, churches, shrines, and tombs.
But when Daesh swept into Iraq in 2014, they announced their “caliphate” from Mosul, and their onslaught forced hundreds of thousands of Christians in the Nineveh province to flee.
On the outside wall of Um Al-Mauna, the extremists wrote “no entry, by order of the Daesh Hesba Division (the religious police),” tasked with imposing harsh rules.
“I feel like I have been brought back to life,” said Abdel Masih Selim, a 75-year-old retired banker, who fled the rule of Daesh in Mosul, settling in Irbil, the capital of Iraq’s autonomous Kurdistan region.
Salim, who came to Mosul specially for the mass, said Chaldeans “have come to see their church that they were forced to abandon when Daesh oppressors ruined it.”
In 2017, the US-backed Iraqi army drove Daesh out after months of grueling fighting, and the Chaldean church was left plastered with the group’s propaganda.
During Daesh’s rule, all marks of Christianity were removed.
Instead, extremists had scribbled their noms de guerre on the church’s walls.
But today, the small church has restored its former design.
In its courtyard, photos show the building’s state after being saved from Daesh, and others illustrate the restoration process.
In Mosul, several other churches and monasteries are being renovated, but reconstruction is slow, and many Christians have not returned.
Pope Francis made a historic visit to the city in 2021, which was meant to encourage the Christian community and deepen interfaith dialogue.
Chaldeans, the majority of Iraq’s Christians, numbered more than a million before the 2003 war that led to the ouster of Saddam Hussein, but the community has since dwindled to just 400,000 in the face of recurring violence that ravaged the country.
Yet Raphael Sako, the patriarch of the Chaldean Catholic church, said despite the difficulties, Iraq’s Christians have a future in the country.
“This is our country and our land,” he said during the inauguration.
“We are here to stay even if there aren’t many of us left.”

 


US military says it destroyed 5 Houthi drones and 2 missile systems

US military says it destroyed 5 Houthi drones and 2 missile systems
Updated 6 sec ago
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US military says it destroyed 5 Houthi drones and 2 missile systems

US military says it destroyed 5 Houthi drones and 2 missile systems
  • During the last three months, the Houthis have abducted at least 70 Yemenis working for UN agencies, international aid and humanitarian organizations, and foreign missions in Yemen
  • Minister blames international community’s inaction for escalating militia crackdown on civil, humanitarian society in Yemen

AL-MUKALLA: The US military said on Wednesday that it had destroyed several Houthi drones and missile systems that were threatening international shipping lanes off Yemen as the Houthis reported that US and UK warplanes had struck an area under their control in the southern province of Taiz.

The US Central Command said that over the last 24 hours, its forces destroyed five Houthi drones and two missile systems in Houthi-controlled Yemeni areas that “presented a clear and imminent” threat to international and US and allies’ ships in the region.

The Houthis reported on Wednesday new strikes on Taiz for the second day in a row, with two airstrikes by US and UK aircraft on unidentified targets in the province’s Al-Kamp region.

Since Sunday, Houthi media has reported daily airstrikes by the two nations on Hodeidah, Ibb, and other Yemeni locations.

The Houthis said on Tuesday that two students were killed and at least 10 were injured in a stampede at a school in Al-Janad, Taiz province, caused by large explosions from a location targeted by US and UK warplanes.

In response to the Houthi attacks on ships that began in November, the US formed a coalition of marine task forces to protect ships, designated the Houthi militia as a terrorist organization, and launched strikes on Houthi targets in Yemen, including military bases where drones and missiles were being assembled and coastal areas where drone boats were being prepared to attack ships.

The Houthis claim that their campaign, which has targeted over 100 commercial and naval ships over the last 10 months, is intended to force Israel to end its war in the Palestinian Gaza Strip.

This comes as Yemen’s Minister of Information Muammar Al-Eryani has reiterated his calls for tougher international action to punish the Houthis for abducting dozens of Yemenis with international organizations as well as the militia’s violations of human rights.

During the last three months, the Houthis have abducted at least 70 Yemenis working for UN agencies, international aid and humanitarian organizations, and foreign missions in Yemen, accusing them of using their positions with those organizations to spy for the US and Israel.

In a lengthy post on X on Tuesday to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the Houthi abduction of workers, the Yemeni minister blamed the international community’s inaction for the escalating Houthi crackdown on civil and humanitarian society in Yemen, noting that the world had long “turned a blind eye” to the Houthis’ violations that preceded their latest crackdown.

“The terrorist Houthi militia considered the hesitant international positions a green light to escalate its repressive measures against international and humanitarian organizations operating in the areas under its control, and the local employees working there, without any regard for the disastrous effects of these practices on the difficult economic and humanitarian conditions in the areas under its control,” Al-Eryani said.

He also reiterated his government’s call for international organizations, including UN agencies, to relocate offices to Aden, the country’s interim capital, to protect workers from Houthi repression.


Gaza rescuers say 10 killed in Israeli strike on school

Gaza rescuers say 10 killed in Israeli strike on school
Updated 18 min 27 sec ago
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Gaza rescuers say 10 killed in Israeli strike on school

Gaza rescuers say 10 killed in Israeli strike on school
  • The Al-Jawni school in central Gaza’s Nuseirat, already hit several times during the war, was struck again on Wednesday
  • The Israeli military said its air force had “conducted a precise strike on terrorists who were operating inside a Hamas command-and-control center” on the school grounds

GAZA STRIP, Palestinian Territories: An Israeli air strike Wednesday hit a central Gaza school, with the Hamas-run territory’s civil defense agency reporting 10 killed in the facility turned displacement shelter and the military saying it had targeted militants.
The vast majority of the Gaza Strip’s 2.4 million people have been displaced at least once by the war, triggered by Hamas’s October 7 attack on Israel, with many seeking safety in school buildings.
Israeli forces have struck several such schools in recent months, saying Palestinian militants were operating there and hiding among displaced civilians, charges denied by Hamas.
The Al-Jawni school in central Gaza’s Nuseirat, already hit several times during the war, was struck again on Wednesday, civil defense agency spokesman Mahmud Bassal told AFP.
“There are 10 martyrs, including women and children, in the Israeli bombing of Al-Jawni school,” he said, also reporting “a number” of wounded. AFP was unable to independently verify the toll.
The Israeli military said its air force had “conducted a precise strike on terrorists who were operating inside a Hamas command-and-control center” on the school grounds, without elaborating on its outcome or the identities of those targeted.
The Hamas government media office said about 5,000 displaced people were sheltering at the school, which used to be run by the United Nations agency for Palestinian refugees UNRWA, when it was hit on Wednesday.
Al-Jawni has been hit at least five times in more than 11 months of war, Bassal said.
In July, at least 16 people were killed in an Israeli air strike the military said had targeted “terrorists.”
Israel’s military offensive since the October 7 attack has killed at least 41,084 people in Gaza, according to the territory’s health ministry. The UN rights office says most of the dead are women and children.
The Hamas attack on southern Israel that triggered the war resulted in the deaths of 1,205 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures, which also includes hostages killed in captivity.


Tunisia flag blunder lands 4 behind bars

Tunisia flag blunder lands 4 behind bars
Updated 43 min 57 sec ago
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Tunisia flag blunder lands 4 behind bars

Tunisia flag blunder lands 4 behind bars
  • Footage circulated online in recent days showed the Turkish flag flying over the Tunis headquarters of the national railway company SNCFT
  • It said the Turkish flag had been purchased by mistake, and that staff “didn’t notice until it was raised“

TUNIS: Four Tunisians have been arrested after Turkiye’s red-and-white flag, which bears a strong resemblance to Tunisia’s but is not the same, was raised atop a government building, local media said Wednesday.
Footage circulated online in recent days showed the Turkish flag flying over the Tunis headquarters of the national railway company SNCFT, prompting a formal apology and arrests.
The two flags have the same colors and both bear the Islamic symbols of a star and crescent, with the most noticeable difference being a white circle on the Tunisian one.
SNCFT on Tuesday announced it had removed the wrong flag, apologizing in a statement for the mix-up and saying an investigation had been launched.
It said the Turkish flag had been purchased by mistake, and that staff “didn’t notice until it was raised.”
The blunder did not go unnoticed on social media, and on Wednesday Mosaique FM radio and other Tunisian news outlets said four railway workers had been arrested.
The media reports did not elaborate on the identities of those arrested or the charges they may face.
In May, the covering of the national flag at a sporting event in Tunis, due to sanctions from the World Anti-Doping Agency, led to the arrests of three officials.
The sports officials faced charges including “attack on the flag of Tunisia” and “plot against the internal security” of the state, and were released last week after a three-month sentence.
The incident had provoked outrage from Tunisian President Kais Saied, who has been readying for elections next month which he is widely expected to win.
Photos from the May flag incident showed Kais in tears during a visit to the venue.


Gaza carpenter crafts wooden sandals for daughters as war rages

Gaza carpenter crafts wooden sandals for daughters as war rages
Updated 11 September 2024
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Gaza carpenter crafts wooden sandals for daughters as war rages

Gaza carpenter crafts wooden sandals for daughters as war rages
  • “When we were displaced, we started running and the sandals broke,” said Heba
  • “I threw them off and started running. Our feet became very hot. So, we had to make sandals from wood,” she said, walking on hot sand with her new footwear

KHAN YOUNIS, Gaza: Twelve-year-old Heba Dawas lost her footwear in the chaos while fleeing Israel’s military offensive in Gaza.
So, her carpenter father made wooden-soled sandals for her so she can tread more safely through the tons of rubble, hot sand and twisted metal of the besieged Palestinian enclave.
“When we were displaced, we started running and the sandals broke,” said Heba, who lives in a tent camp with her family in the southern Gaza city of Khan Younis.
“I threw them off and started running. Our feet became very hot. So, we had to make sandals from wood,” she said, walking on hot sand with her new footwear.
Her father Saber Dawas, 39, came up with the idea after finding the price of sandals too expensive. Now his daughter does not have to go barefoot amid the ruins of Gaza.
“I had to make a tailored size for each daughter,” he said.
SANDALS IN DEMAND
Soon enough, his neighbors noticed him making the sandals and started asking him to make some for their children.
Using basic carpentry tools, he made them for “a symbolic price,” he says.
The sandals have a wooden sole and a strap made of a rubber strip or fabric. But there was a challenge in finding more wood because Palestinians needed it for cooking and fires.
“Everything here in Gaza is difficult to find,” Dawas said, rubbing the base of a sandal with one of his young daughters watching by his side.
Making wooden sandals may ease the pressure of the war but life is still fraught with challenges in Gaza, where the Israeli offensive against Hamas has killed more than 41,000 Palestinians, according to the Gaza health ministry.
Nearly 2 million people have been displaced, often repeatedly, Gazan health officials say.
Hamas triggered the war on Oct. 7 when the Palestinian militant group attacked Israel, killing 1,200 people and taking over 250 hostage, according to Israeli tallies.
A humanitarian crisis has gripped Gaza since then with Palestinians struggling to find food, water and fuel as they move up and down the territory seeking a safe place to shelter.
The United States, Qatar and Egypt have failed to secure a ceasefire through mediation after many attempts.
The border crossing with Egypt has been shut, bringing the flow of aid and basic goods such as shoes to a halt.
“People now are walking around with mismatched shoes,” said Momen Al-Qarra, a Palestinian cobbler repairing old shoes in a little market in Khan Younis.
“If the situation continues like this for two weeks or a month at the most, without the opening of the border, people will be barefoot.”


Casbah building collapse kills woman in Algiers

Casbah building collapse kills woman in Algiers
Updated 11 September 2024
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Casbah building collapse kills woman in Algiers

Casbah building collapse kills woman in Algiers
  • The uninhabited building fell shortly after midnight onto a neighboring home

ALGIERS: A building collapse in the UNESCO-listed Casbah of Algiers killed a woman and injured three of her family members on Wednesday, emergency services said.
The uninhabited building fell shortly after midnight onto a neighboring home where the woman lived, said the civil defense agency in the Algerian capital.
The Casbah, a historic city built on a hill overlooking the Mediterranean, has suffered multiple building collapses in recent years.
In 2019, five people, including a baby, died when their home collapsed in the old city. Following that incident, the mayor of Algiers was sacked.
Originally fortified under Ottoman rule in the 16th century, the Casbah played a key role during Algeria’s 1954-1962 war for independence.
Despite ongoing conservation efforts, many structures remain at risk, propped up solely by wooden and metal supports.