ISIS, Kurds Clash Near Assyrian Town, 2000 Assyrian Families Driven From Mosul
ISIS, Kurds Clash Near Assyrian Town, 2000 Assyrian Families Driven From Mosul AINA 2014-07-23 14:11 GMT
(AINA) — ISIS and Kurdish forces clashed yesterday at about 10 PM on the outskirts of Tel Kepe, an Assyrian town 13 miles north of Mosul. ISIS to take over a medicine factory about 1.5 miles west of Tel Kepe. ISIS were forced to go back after a short battle.
The latest count of the number of Assyrian families driven out of Mosul stands at 2,000.
The following report is from the Christian Aid Program Nohadra Iraq (CAPNI), an aid organization of the Assyrian Church of the East.
Mosul
- All 30 churches and monasteries are under ISIS control
- Crosses have been removed from all of them
- Many of them have been burned, destroyed and looted
- Many are been used as ISIS centers
The following are few examples:
- St. Ephraim Syriac Orthodox Cathedral in Al Shurta district (East side of Mosul): ISIS converted it to a mosque and installed loudspeakers for call to prayers
- Syriac Catholic church in the old part of Mosul was looted and torched
- Mar Gewargis (St. George) monastery was looted
- Mar Thomas (St. Thomas) Syriac Catholic historical and old church was looted after the doors were broken
- Mar Behnam (St. Behnam) Syriac Catholic monastery in the Ancient Assyrian town of Nimrod is controlled by ISIS
- religious Sunni, Shiite and Christian tombs have been destroyed, according to Sharia
- Shiite prayer mosques (Hussayniya) have been demolished
All non-Sunni communities have been targeted by ISIS. Christian, Yazidi and Shiite religious sites have been destroyed. Turkish and Shabak Shiites have fled from their homes and villages.
Nearly 80% of the residents of Baghdede (Hamdaniya/Qaraqosh) have returned after fleeing from fighting between ISIS and Kurds. Baghdede, with a population of 50,000, is 97% Assyrian. There is still a severe shortage of electricity and water still cut off. Residents are using wells for water.
All municipal services have stopped.
The same conditions exist for the Assyrian towns of Bartilla, Bashiqa and Bahzany.