ATTENTION: Visitors looking for the Royal Eagle restaurant website, click here

20090713

Baghdad churches bombed

From CNN:

4 killed, 32 wounded as 6 Baghdad churches bombed

BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) -- At least four people were killed and 32 wounded as six Baghdad-area churches were bombed within 24 hours, officials told CNN.

The first bombing took place Saturday night at St. Joseph's church in western Baghdad, according to an Interior Ministry official. Two bombs placed inside the church exploded at about 10 p.m. No one was in the church at the time of the attack.

Sunday afternoon, three bombs exploded outside churches, wounding eight civilians, the official said. The bombs detonated within a 15-minute span, between 4:30 and 4:45 p.m. Two of the churches are in central Baghdad's al-Karrada district, and the third is in al-Ghadeer in eastern Baghdad.

Sunday evening, a car bomb exploded outside a church on Palestine Street in eastern Baghdad just after 7 p.m., the official said. Four people died, and 21 were wounded.

And in southern Baghdad's Dora district, a bomb outside a church wounded three other civilians.

Most of the churches were damaged in the bombings, according to video footage.

One Christian Iraqi, interviewed outside Sacred Heart Church -- one of the two in al-Karrada -- said the bomb went off shortly before 5 p.m., as members were arriving for Sunday evening mass. No one was hurt, Sabhan George told CNN, but the bomb damaged the church building and some cars outside.

George said he is concerned about the church bombings. If this continues, he said, "there will be no Christians left in Iraq."

St. Joseph's was one of six churches hit by coordinated bombings of Christian houses of worship in Baghdad and Mosul in 2004. The church is in the al-Jamiaa neighborhood of Baghdad, a former stronghold of al Qaeda in Iraq. There have been recent reports of an increase in targeted attacks in the area.

Many of Iraq's estimated 1 million Christians have fled the country after targeted attacks by extremists. In October, more than a thousand Iraqi families fled the northern city of Mosul after they were reportedly frightened by a series of killings and threats by Muslim extremists, who apparently ordered them to convert to Islam or face possible death. At least 14 Christians were killed in Mosul in the first two weeks of October.

Separately, gunmen shot and killed an official in the Iraqi city of Kirkuk on Sunday morning, a local police official told CNN.

Using guns with silencers, the assailants opened fire on Rizko Aziz Nissan outside his home in central Kirkuk at 8:15 a.m.

Nissan was an Iraqi Christian, but the motives behind his killing were not immediately clear. Kirkuk is 150 miles (240 kilometers) north of Baghdad.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

This is another proof that Islam is an intolerant religion. This is what Arabs did 1400 years ago by murdering, terrorizing, and forcing other nations across Middle East, North Africa and Asia to convert to Islam.
A Christian from Middle East.

Anonymous said...

For Islam, Christianity is the most dangerous enemy, more dangerous than nations at war against them, because Islam is darkness and when the light comes it destroys the darkness, so the worst enemy of Islam is the light which is Christianity.

Anonymous said...

So the U.S. is quietly taking in 1500 Palestinian Iraqi's but what about these Christians? I am NOT Christian but for would rather we take in people who have more in common with this nation than those we are at war with culturally no matter what the PC types say.

Matt said...

Anonymous,

I assume by "Palestinian Iraqi's" that you mean Muslims. And I agree: What about the Christians? We claim to be a "Christian nation." What a joke! And not a very funny one. We don't care about the Christians being persecuted in the Middle East or in Africa or in India or Turkey or China or anywhere else. We care about one thing: commerce. To call the U.S. a Christian nation is a vile insult to the Faith.

Matt said...

P.S. No more "Anonymous" comments please. Make up a name if you have to.

Mike said...

I think we are a nation founded on principles which were influenced by judeo-Christian values. But I look at our society and our culture and our "values" and agree that we are far from a nation which can call itself Christian.