10 Tdabbakh 6758
Volume XIV

Issue 9

31 July 2008


1- 8 6 6 - M Y  Z I N D A

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Click on Blue Links in the left column to jump to that section within this issue.  Cover by Farooq I.
The Lighthouse
  Learning from Past Mistakes: Assyrians and the Iraqi Elections Ninos Warda
  Islamist Group Threatens Assyrian Churches in Mosul
Nouri Maliki Asks Pope to Urge Christians to Return to Iraq
Maliki Offers Iraqi Christians Protection
Iraq's Christians Form Militias to Combat Islamic Extremists
Popular Council Rep. Admits to Receiving Kurdish Funds
Chaldean Group Seeks Autonomous Rights in Northern Iraq
Sunni Sheikh Offers Support for Iraqi Christians
Bet-Kolia Says Christians Living A Good Life in Iran
Chaldean Christians Hold World Youth Day in North Iraq

  European Parliament Conference Highlights Assyrian Suffering in Iraq
Ishaia Isho Ousted from AGC Exec Committee
Swedish Parliament Refuses to Recognize 1915 Genocide
Visiting Iraqi Christians Tell Exiles in Australia to Stay Strong
Assyrian Actuary Swims Across the English Channel
Assyrian Beauty Reaches Finals at Mrs. World Contest
Final Statement of Mor Jacob of Edessa Symposium
Assyrian Flag Shows Up at Euro 2008 Soccer Game
2009 Christians in Ottoman Empire Conference in Canada
Cartoonist Gary Trudeau Lampoons Coverage of Assyrian refugees
Iraqi Bishop Protests World Youth Day Visa Denials
AAS-A Set to Achieve BBB 'Seal of Approval'
Daylight and Darkness in a Baghdad Women's Home
In Memoriam: Melina Oshana 1940-2008
Iraqi Refugees Condemn EU Decision on Their Intake
Assyrian Man Arrested for Drug Trafficking Through US-Canada Border
Chaldean Festival Set for August 9 - 10

  May is Beauty Queen
The Pot Calling the Kettle Black
Climbing the Rigi Mountain to Remember Seyfo Genocide

Click to Learn More :
ZINDA CALENDAR
ZINDA ARCHIVES

  Golden Fins Obelit Yadgar
  AUA-Australia's Plans for Martyrs Day in August
Hannibal Alkhas' Paintings on Display at a Dubai Gallery
Treasures from Assyria in the British Museum
Oriental Institute Examines the Looting Iraq National Museum
Sabri Atman Lectures in Greece about Seyfo-The Genocide
Requesting Support For Chronicle of Michael the Syrian
Zinda Recommendations from Gorgis Press
  When Hindu Temple was Our Christian School
Paul Batou Demands Audience and Respect for Iraq
For Iraqi Christians, Money Bought Survival
Papal Address to Mar Dinkha IV
Cardinal Kasper on the Assyrian Church of the East
Iraqi Bishops Ask for Help Protecting Their Flock

Mikhael K. Pius
Helen Talia
Andres E. Kramer
Official Address
Cardinal Kasper
Deal Hudson
  Fadi Pataq  

Since Our Last Issue
A Chronology of Important Events

Friday, 6 June Vatican said today that Islam has overtaken Roman Catholicism as the biggest single religious denomination in the world. Muslims make up 19.2 percent of the world's population and Catholics 17.4 percent. All Christian groups together make up 33 percent of the world population or about two billion people.
Monday, 9 June

A Symposium commemorating the 1300th anniversary of the passing away of Mor Jacob of Edessa is held in Aleppo, Syria

Wednesday, 11 June More than 100 guests attend a conference at the European Parliament in Brussels on the situation of the Assyrians in Iraq.
Thursday, 12 June

The Swedish Parliament, with 245 to 37 votes (1 abstain, 66 absent), rejects a call for recognition of the 1915 genocide in the Ottoman Empire.  The debate lasts over three hours.

A huge flag of Assyria is seen waving in the audience during the Croatia vs Germany football (soccer) game.

Thursday, 19 June The Executive Committee of the Assyrian General Conference (AGC) removes Mr. Ishaia Isho as its executive member.
Saturday, 21 June

Pope Benedict XVI receives in audience in Vatican His Holiness Mar Dinkha IV, Catholicos patriarch of the Assyrian Church of the East.

Turkish publisher, Ragip Zarakolu, is jailed for insulting the Turkish nation by publishing a book on the mass killings of Christians in 1915 (the Seyfo Genocide)

Monday, 30 June Monalisa Lazarof, an Assyrian from Southern California, represents Iran at the Mrs. World 2008 contest in Kaliningrad, Russia.
Wednesday, 2 July An Islamist group calling itself the Batallion of Just Punishment sends threatening letters to Christian families in Iraq in retaliation for the formation of an Assyrian Police Force in the Nineveh Plains.
Sunday, 6 July Some 100 people from around the world participate in the climbing of the Rigi mountain in Switzerland to commemorate the Seyfo Genocide of 1915.
Tuesday, 8 July Sheikh Ahmad al-Rishawi, head of the Sahwah al-Iraq (The Awakening Movement), offers protection for the Christians in the al-Anbar province and elsewhere in Iraq.
Tuesday, 13 July The Assyrian swimmer, Kaise Stephan of Australia, swims the English Channel in 12.5 hours and raises over $100,000 for the Children’s Hospital at Westmead.
Wednesday, 16 July 6600 Chaldean Catholic youth participate in the Youth Day in north Iraq. Chaldean youth were not granted visas to join the Youth Day held at the same time in Australia.  Their Assyrian counterparts in Iran similarly held conferences in Urmia, Iran.
Thursday, 17 July Zaia Petros, director of the Chaldean National Council, says the Chaldean Christians in northern Iraq may be seeking autonomous rights and form a coalition to run in the provincial council elections.
Thursday, 24 July During a radio interview conducted by Sweden's Radio Qolo, Mr. Gibrael Marko, of the Popular Council of the Chaldean Syriac Assyrians acknowledged that his organization receives Kurdish funding.
Saturday, 26 July Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Maliki asks Pope Benedict XVI in Italy to encourage Iraqi Christians who have fled their country to return, citing the improved security situation.   He also asks the Pope to visit Iraq.
Wednesday, 30 July Iraqi Prime Minster, after returning from Vatican, says that the Iraqi government will offer protection to the threatened Christian community in northern Iraq.
Thursday, 31 July

Yonatan Bet-Kolia, parliamentary representative of the Assyrians in Iran says in  a speech in Urmia: "Religious minorities live in peace in Iran and are free to perform their religious ceremonies.

The opening ceremonies of the 23rd Annual Tammuz Games are held in Urmia, Iran. Over 400 Assyrian athletes from Iran, Iraq, Syria, Armenia, and Georgia participate in this year's competitions.

The Lighthouse
Feature Article

 

Learning from Past Mistakes:
Assyrians and the Iraqi Elections 2008

Ninos Warda
Assyrian Council of Europe (ACE)
Brussels, Belgium

Introduction

The right to vote in elections represents one of the most fundamental political rights a citizen can exercise and has now become entrenched in many international legal instruments such as the Universal Declaration of Human Rights 1948, the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights 1966, the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms 1950, and many other regional legal instruments. The importance of this right is captured by the phrase ‘one (wo)man, one vote, one value,’ and in essence elections are the institutions by which the represented authorize their representatives to act for them.[1]

The importance of this right cannot be overstated in new and fledgling democracies such as Iraq. After years of brutal oppression and persecution, the Iraqi people were finally given an opportunity in 2005 to participate in what were hoped to be fair and free elections for all Iraqis. Millions of Iraqis took advantage of their essential right to vote and went to the polls. Unfortunately, however, the enthusiasm which resulted from this new found freedom was not shared by hundreds of thousands of Assyrians (also known as Chaldeans or Syriacs) and a smaller number of other minorities such as Sabeans and Turkmen as reports emanating from Iraq, as corroborated by other international organisations, confirmed that voting irregularities and deficiencies on the day of voting denied them of their right to vote.

The aim of this paper is to raise awareness of the issues faced by Assyrians and other minorities in the Iraqi elections of 2005 which prevented them from voting and to propose possible ways in which the European Union (EU) can act and help the Iraqi government and the Independent Electoral Commission of Iraq (IECI) so as to prevent the events of 2005 which left hundreds of thousands of eager Iraqi citizens disappointed and without any redress from occurring in the upcoming provincial elections in Iraq which are scheduled to take place in October 2008.

The Importance of Election and Representation in Iraq

Before going on to deal with the problems minorities such as the Assyrians faced when voting in the 2005 Iraqi elections, it is helpful to briefly touch upon the specific importance of elections and representation in Iraq.

Genuine elections are no doubt the bedrock of any democratic society and a society can not claim to be truly democratic if it does not hold genuine elections. In countries such as Iraq, which possess very pluralistic and diverse ethnic, religious and linguistic communities, genuine elections can foster national unity and reconciliation particularly after the country has been affected by war or dictatorial regimes. As voting itself is an act of direct participation in public decision making,[2] the participation of minorities in elections is crucial as it not only helps to create a feeling of national unity and brotherhood but it also provides minorities with a real opportunity to participate in the public and political life of the state, thereby preventing any resentment or envy surfacing between different ethnic or religious groups in the event of members of a specific group being prevented or unable to participate in such a process. The importance of this should not be underestimated and can be gauged by events in Iraq itself the past few years which have seen different groups jostling for political power.

With regards to minorities however elections also provide a golden opportunity to elect genuine representatives of the people they claim to represent and this is no more so than in the case of Iraq which has a myriad of different ethnic, linguistic and religious minorities. As Katz has cogently argued, the notion of representation suggests that the elected represent the electors to the extent that they are like them in some significant way, i.e. the point would be that representation requires the representative to share the interests or opinions of the represented.[3]  It makes sense to assume that many members of minority groups would rather elect members of their own communities to office as they believe they can best understand the needs and wants of such minorities and therefore be in a better position to influence governmental policies in such regard. Again, one only has to look to the results of the elections in Iraq in 2005 which generally correspond to this trend for proof of this.

Therefore, in pluralistic societies such as Iraq it is imperative that all citizens and especially small or vulnerable minorities are given free and well-informed choices to be able to vote for whom they think can represent them best and that this right should not be subjected to any impediment.

What Went Wrong?

In its International Religious Freedom Report 2005, the U.S. Department of State reported the following with
regards to the Iraqi January elections in 2005:

“Many residents on the Ninewah Plain, who are mostly non-Muslim, were unable to vote in the January elections. According to the Assyrian International News Agency, only 93 of 330 polling places opened, ballot boxes were not delivered, and incidents of voter fraud and intimidation occurred. This resulted from administrative breakdowns on voting day and the refusal of Kurdish security forces to allow ballot boxes to pass to predominantly Christian villages, denying as many as 100,000 Assyrian Christians and smaller numbers of Sabeans of their right to vote in the elections. After an investigation of these allegations, the Independent Electoral Commission of Iraq (IECI) acknowledged that the voting facilities in Ninewah were inadequate. The IECI claimed that these irregularities were a manifestation of the poor security situation in Ninewah, Anbar, and other regions and not a problem that exclusively affected a particular segment of the population.”[4]

According to the Assyrian International News Agency (AINA), six major Assyrian towns and villages in the Nineveh Plains around Mosul including Baghdeda, Bartilla, Karamlesh, Shekhan, Ain Sifne and Bahzan did not receive ballot boxes which were stored in Arbil.[5] According to another AINA report, Susan Patto, chief of staff to the Secretary General of the Assyrian Democratic Movement (ADM) [6] in Iraq said that her organization contacted officials in Mosul who responded that the security situation prevented delivery of the vote boxes which caused Baghdad officials to then instruct election personnel in Arbil to deliver the boxes, but failed to do so. Subsequently, after the election hours ended on Sunday a U.S. helicopter delivered four boxes, two designated for Bartilla and two for Baashiqa, and election officials instructed local officials to permit three hours of voting on Monday morning to compensate for the previous day’s problems. According to Patto, “The next morning people headed again for the centers, but there were no staff, no ballots and no ink – just the boxes.”[7] According to the ADM, the Tel-Kaif district also did not have enough voting ballots, preventing hundreds of people from voting in towns such as Al-Qosh, Tel-Sqof, Batnaya and Tel-Kaif.[8] The voting irregularities in the Nineveh Plains prevented the minorities residing there, which make up the bulk of the population, such as the Assyrians, Shabaks and Yezidis, from voting in the elections. Estimates differ as to the number of people affected. The U.S. Department of State International Religious Freedom Report 2005 states that as many as 100,000 Assyrian Christians and a smaller number of Sabeans were prevented from voting,[9] whereas other figures range from 50,000 Assyrians[10] up to 250,000 non-Kurds[11] being unable to vote in the elections.


Naturally, the disappointment engendered by the inability to vote caused the affected communities to take to the streets to protest against their inability to vote in towns in the Nineveh Plains such as Baghdeda[12] but also outside the Green Zone in Baghdad.[13]

The Independent Electoral Commission of Iraq (IECI) admitted that there had been irregularities with 40 ballot boxes used in the January elections in the Ninawa Province; the IECI found that only in the town of Bartilla, with 15,188 voters, did the vote not take place.[14]  An IECI investigation found that security issues were the main causes of the irregularities with some materials being stolen forcibly from some electoral centers by armed groups, members of the commission being subjected to physical assaults in the region by some armed groups, and some ballot cards were stolen by an armed group and then returned in irregular bags.[15]  Unfortunately however, the IECI failed to take steps to ensure that the minority communities prevented from voting were given adequate means of redress, i.e. an opportunity to vote at another time.

Ensuring Genuine Elections in 2008

Provincial elections are scheduled to take place in Iraq in October 2008. Having experienced the irregularities which took place in 2005, both Iraq and the international community must take urgent and effective measures to ensure that the problems which afflicted some communities then are not allowed to recur again this year. As this paper is mostly concerned with how the European Union can help in this regard, attention shall thus now be focused on what role the EU can play to ensure genuine elections in Iraq.

In its Report on the European Union’s Role in Iraq, the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the European Parliament recommended to the Council that the EU, as a global player, should assume its responsibilities for building up a new democratic Iraq and that the Council should adopt measures ‘strengthening electoral procedures at the local level in order to ensure that provincial councils are fully representative of all local populations.’[16] In addition, the report recommended that the EU and its Member States, in close consultation with the Iraqi authorities and other partners, such as the UN agencies and NGOs, ‘continue to provide technical assistance for the organisation of fair and free elections.’[17]

Taking into consideration the events which took place in 2005 which prevented large numbers of minority communities from participating in the elections, and the added complications faced by the IECI in ensuring that internally displaced persons (IDPs), currently estimated at 2.4 million,[18] are also able to vote in this year’s elections, the importance of preparing well in advance to ensure genuine elections for all Iraqis is not to be understated.

A major contribution the EU and its Member States, all of which share a long tradition of democracy, can make to ensure genuine elections in Iraq in 2005 is by assisting the Iraqi government and the IECI in designing and implementing an electoral system which is equitable to all Iraqis, specifically minority communities. Such assistance would be completely in line with the European Commission’s Electoral Assistance activities under its External Cooperation Programmes which has supported electoral processes in post-conflict situations such as in the Democratic Republic of Congo and Haiti.[19]

As this topic would require a paper solely dedicated on this issue, it is helpful to just briefly touch upon the important issue of minority representation within electoral systems.

As the United Nations Assistance Mission for Iraq (UNAMI) has correctly noted, when looking at electoral systems, the result of an election, as a group of representatives who are elected, should reflect the makeup of the society it represents.[20] As noted above with regards to the issue of representation in pluralistic societies such as Iraq, the importance of this cannot be underestimated. In the 2005 January elections, in which elections took place for 15 governorate councils, the IECI adopted a system of proportional representation with closed lists and the seats were allocated through a formula of Hare Quota and largest remainders with a natural threshold.[21] The presence of thresholds makes it harder for minority communities to successfully elect representatives from their respective communities, thus prompting UNAMI to recommend that for future governorate elections, legislation should not include any reference to thresholds, in order to facilitate the election of minority groups.[22] Another way to circumvent the problem of the lack of minority representation, in addition to the lifting of thresholds, is by creating reserved seats for minorities.

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This is where a number or percentage of seats can only be contested by candidates from, and sometimes only voted for by voters from, designated historically under-represented groups.[23] This should apply especially so to indigenous communities such as the Assyrians in Iraq who have had a long history of political suppression under the previous Ba’ath regime where they were forced to deny their nationality and register themselves as either Arabs or Kurds in Iraqi censuses. Thus, in Iraqi provinces such as Ninawa (in which are situated the Nineveh Plains with their large Assyrian, Shabak and Yezidi minorities), Kirkuk, Baghdad, etc., which all house significant numbers of minority communities, seats should be reserved in governorate councils for minorities to ensure an adequate representation of all communities in the governorate councils. The EU, which itself has a long history of dealing with minority representation, can provide indispensable assistance in this regard.

UNAMI has also voiced concerns about the system of voter registration which may be used in Iraqi elections this year. The reason for this is that the Public Distribution System (PDS) used to draw a voter registry from may prove to be inadequate due to the number of internally displaced persons within Iraq[24] and the number of refugees outside Iraq, thus leading to the possible disenfranchisement of millions of Iraqis.[25] According to UNAMI, creating a new voter registry from scratch can take between 12-18 months, thus rendering elections in October 2008 either impossible, or reliant upon use of the PDS system with its serious deficiencies. The EU, working together with the UN and NGOs in the region, can utilise its financial clout and the number of NGOs with specific expertise in dealing with electoral systems and elections headquartered in the EU to help organize a new voter registry system which can be created in an expeditious and equitable manner so that disenfranchisement of voters can be kept to a minimum, if not prevented completely.

In addition to providing electoral assistance in Iraq the EU can also send an Election Observation Mission (EOM) to the country. EOMs are specifically important because they ‘do not just serve to assess election days but also observe the whole electoral process as a way of gauging the state of democratic development in a given country at a particular time’.[26] Thus, such a mission could gauge whether an election is genuine by touching upon important issues such as whether the legislative procedures for establishing “ground rules” are transparent and inclusive; whether the election administration is independent, impartial, transparent and accountable; whether the rights to freedom of expression, association, movement and assembly are upheld;27 whether a timely judicial review and accessible dispute resolution mechanisms are guaranteed; whether rules on campaign financing grant all with reasonable access to campaign funds; whether equal access to the media permits all parties/candidates to convey their message[28]; and, whether security forces do not place undue restrictions on certain parties/candidates.[29]

According to Council Decision 9262/98, the following pre-conditions must be met for the work of observers:

  • The EU has been formally requested to monitor (i.e. observe) the election by the recognised
    government of the host country;
  • The involvement of EU observers is supported by all the main contesting political parties or
    candidates;
  • The EU has previously been monitoring political developments in the host country for a period of time and has the political capacity to assess developments through EU Heads of Missions (HOMs);
  • There is enough lead time for the leaders of any EU monitoring (i.e. observation) team to be in
    place sufficiently in advance, in order to monitor (i.e. observe) the political and judicial environment and take part as appropriate in preparatory work prior to the election campaign itself.[30]

According to the Handbook for European Union Election Observation Missions, the first part of the mission, the ‘Exploratory Phase’, is required to proceed at least 6-9 months prior to Election Day. Arguably, if the first two pre-conditions set out in Council Decision 9262/98 can be overcome swiftly and if the political will for such a mission is present, there is still adequate time for an EOM to be operational in Iraq by October 2008.

Such a mission may be particularly beneficial to Iraq as it can enhance public confidence in the electoral process, particularly in the wake of the complaints about the process in 2005, it can deter fraud, strengthen respect for human rights, and also contribute to the resolution of conflict, issues which are amongst the main objectives of such a mission.[31] Any such mission can also be of vital importance to minority groups in Iraq as the observation mission can also concentrate attention on issues such as whether or not national minorities have a reasonable chance at representation under the election system selected; the establishment of election district boundaries in minority regions, and the quality of the voter registry regarding national minorities; and whether or not sufficient attention is paid to voter education in national minority languages.[32] Furthermore, as deployment is intended to take account of areas containing sizeable ethnic and/or linguistic minority populations,[33] voters in heterogeneous areas in Iraq such as the Nineveh Plains, Baghdad, Kirkuk, and other areas may feel a sense of reassurance knowing that observation missions are operating in the region, thus helping to prevent voter intimidation from occurring and maximising voter turnout.

  1. Katz, R.S., Democracy and Elections, (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997), p. 104
  2. Ibid, p. 105
  3. Ibid, p. 104
  4. U.S. Department of State, Iraq – International Religious Freedom Report 2005,
    http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/irf/2005/51600.htm, (Accessed: 9th April 2008)
  5. Assyrian International News Agency, Assyrians Prevented from Voting in North Iraq,
    http://www.aina.org/releases/20050131003708.htm, (Accessed: 9th April 2008)
  6. An independent Assyrian political party established in Iraq in 1979. In the 2005 elections the party received 47,263 votes, thus allowing them to obtain a seat in the Iraqi Council of Representatives. It is represented in the Council by Yonadem Yousef Kanna, the current Secretary General. For this, see, Independent Electoral Commission of Iraq, Certified Council of Representatives Candidates, click here, (Accessed: 9th April 2008)
  7. Assyrian International News Agency, Iraqi Christians Claim their Votes Blocked, click here.
  8. Assyrian International News Agency, Assyrian Democratic Movement Protests ChaldoAssyrian Vote Lockout in North Iraq, click here, (Accessed: 9th April 2008)
  9. See footnote 4
  10. See footnote 7
  11. See footnote 5 and Assyrian International News Agency, Assyrians, Turkomen, Yazidis Protest Outside Green Zone, click here, (Accessed: 9th April 2008). The ADM claimed that the deliberate failure to deliver ballot boxes to the major Assyrian districts in north Iraq prevented up to 300,000 people from voting. On this, see, Assyrian International News Agency, Assyrian Democratic
  12. See footnote 5
  13. Assyrian International News Agency, Assyrians, Turkomen, Yazidis Protest Outside Green Zone, click here, (Accessed: 9th April 2008)
  14. Assyrian International News Agency, Iraqi Electoral Commission Admits Ballot Box Irregularities, click here, (Accessed: 9th April 2008)
  15. Assyrian International News Agency, Iraqi Election Commission Report on Voter Lockout Inadequate, click here, (Accessed: 9th April 2008)
  16. European Parliament, Report with a Proposal for a European Parliament Recommendation to the Council
    on the European Union’s Role in Iraq, click here, (Accessed: 9th April 2008)
  17. Ibid
  18. Ibid
  19. On this click here.
  20. United Nations Assistance Mission for Iraq (UNAMI), Governorate Council Elections: Considerations for
    an Electoral System, February 2008, click here, (Accessed: 9th April 2008), p. 5
  21. Ibid, p. 4
  22. Ibid, p. 9
  23. International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance (IDEA), International Electoral Standards:
    Guidelines for Reviewing the Legal Framework of Elections, (Stockholm: International IDEA, 2002), p. 24
  24. As an example, according to figures from the Assyrian Aid Society, a registered Assyrian charity working
    in Iraq, there are 7085 Assyrian families which are internally displaced in the Nineveh Plains and another
    2902 Arab, Shabak and Yezidi families with the same status. (These figures are as of 29th January 2008). If
    the PDS system is used to register voters, any eligible voters within these families may be prevented from
    voting.
  25. UNAMI, Governorate Elections in Iraq 2007, click here, (Accessed: 9th April 2008)
  26. Click here.
  27. For example, in the 2005 elections, the Assyrian General Conference (AGC - Slate 800) reported that
    they had been prevented from campaigning in Assyrian villages in the Dohuk Province such as the village
    of Mangesh by armed members of the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP). According to the AGC, the armed
    men took down campaign posters from the walls, confiscated 3000 posters, 25 banners, and ordered the
    group to leave Mangesh. On this, see, Assyrian General Conference, Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP)
    Stops Assyrian General Conference from Promoting Slate 800 in Northern Iraq, click here, (Accessed: 9th April 2008)
  28. For example, AshurTV, a local television station in Iraq owned by the Assyrian Democratic Movement
    (ADM), has been forced to close and stop broadcasting due to lack of funding. Television stations and other
    forms of media are vital to political parties representing minorities in that they allow them to convey their
    messages to the electorate so that the electorate can make an informed choice of who to vote for when
    participating in elections.
  29. On these, see, Handbook for European Union Election Observation Missions, click here, Accessed: 9th April 2008)
  30. Ibid, p. 17
  31. Ibid, p. 21
  32. Ibid, p. 49
  33. Ibid, p. 55

Good Morning Assyria
News From the Homeland

 

Islamist Group Threatens Assyrian Churches in Mosul

Courtesy of Adnkronos
2 July 2008

(ZNDA: Mosul)  An Islamist group has sent threatening letters to Assyrian churches in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul, asking them not to cooperate with US forces.

The letter sent by The Batallion of Just Punishment, Jihad Base in Mesopotamia, also opposes the establishment of a sectarian Assyrian-Christian police force.

"We caution and warn anyone who tries to rob us through dealings with the Americans or through the spreading of American forces and/or police to protect the Holy Shrines in the Islamic Republic of Iraq, that these shrines would remain target of the freedom fighters," the letter said.

"We remind the dhimmi people [Jews and Christians] that Iraq is for the noble Iraqis and not for how you are now."

The Islamist group also refers to Assyrian Christians as 'Dhimmi', or a non-Muslim subject of the state governed by Islamic Sharia law.

"I suspect this letter may have actually come from Ansar Al-Islam," said an unnamed Assyrian community leader, referring to the Kurdish Islamist group affiliated with al-Qaeda.

"The Kurds don't want us to have our own police force."

Assyrians are an ethnic group in Iran, Iraq, Turkey and Syria. Nearly all Assyrians converted to Christianity during the first century A.D.

Most of the Christians in Iraq belong to the Assyrian and Chaldean Catholic denominations. Others groups include Syrian Orthodox or protestants.

During Saddam Hussein's secular regime they were free to worship - one of the regime's most prominent Christian members was Deputy Prime Minister Tariq Aziz.

Since the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003, growing religious intolerance and sectarian violence have prompted many Iraqi Christians to flee abroad.

Nouri Maliki Asks Pope to Urge Christians to Return to Iraq

Courtesy of the Los Angeles Times
26 July 2008
By Ned Parket and Tracy Wilkinson

Pope Benedict XVI receives a gift from Iraq's Prime Minister Nouri Maliki.  Photo by Osservatore Romano / EPA.

(ZNDA: Vatican) Prime Minister Nouri Maliki asked Pope Benedict XVI in a meeting on 26 July in Italy to encourage Iraqi Christians who have fled their country to return, citing the improved security situation. 

He also invited the pontiff to visit Iraq.

"I . . . appealed to his holiness to encourage Christians who left the country to go back and be part of the social structure of Iraq again," Maliki told reporters after his session with the pope at the pontiff's summer residence in Castel Gandolfo.

More than five years after the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, the country remains deeply divided along ethnic and religious lines and is struggling to put an end to the violence that has characterized the post-Saddam Hussein era.

"His visit would represent support for the efforts of love and peace in Iraq," said Maliki, who has been visiting Germany and Italy this week.

The pope condemned the violence suffered by the Iraqi people and lamented the plight of Iraqi refugees, saying he hoped they could one day return to their homeland. He stressed the importance of inter-religious dialogue and made a special appeal in behalf of Iraq's minority Christians, frequent targets of attacks and kidnappings, saying they were in grave need of better security.

The pope "renewed his condemnation of the violence that hits diverse parts of the country almost every day, without sparing the Christian community, which strongly feels a need for greater security," a statement from the Vatican said.

He also "expressed the hope that Iraq can decisively find the way to peace and development through dialogue and the collaboration of all ethnic and religious groups, including minorities."

Maliki bristled at the notion that Christians were targeted any more than Muslims in Iraq's sectarian violence. Maliki said the pope understands that "bad people exist in all religions, whether Christian or Muslim."

"This sound, realistic, objective understanding by his holiness is the best answer to those who claim that Christians are persecuted in Iraq by Muslims," the prime minister told reporters.

Iraq's Christian minority has been targeted by Sunni Arab militants, who have viewed its members as American allies and heretics. In 2007, Christian residents were expelled from the Baghdad suburb of Dora by Al Qaeda in Iraq sympathizers. In late February, the Chaldean Catholic archbishop of the northern city of Mosul was kidnapped; he was found dead two weeks later.

Christian parliament member Yonadam Kanna said the situation for Christians in Baghdad had improved in recent months, but the circumstances were still horrible for his faith in Mosul.

"In Mosul, the situation is the same as it used to be and it's getting worse," Kanna said. Before 2003, Iraq's Christians were estimated to number about 800,000, but many have fled the country.

Maliki Offers Iraqi Christians Protection

Courtesy of the Middle East Times
30 July 2008

(ZNDA: Baghdad)  The Iraqi government will offer protection to the threatened Christian community in northern Iraq, the prime minister said on Wednesday.

Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki said Baghdad will ensure Iraqi Christians are protected, following a meeting with the head of the Chaldean Catholic Patriarchate of Babylon, Emmanuel III Delly, Voices of Iraq reported.

"Maliki asserted to Delly his government's keenness to protect Iraqi Christians and provide them with all services to make them feel secure and stable in their country," a government statement read.

In early July a group calling itself "The Battalion of Just Punishment, Jihad Base in Mesopotamia" issued a series of threats against Christian churches in northern Iraq.

The meeting with Cardinal Delly follows an earlier visit by the Iraqi premier with Pope Benedict XVI at the Vatican.

Maliki said he would push for a multi-religious conference in Iraq to gather church leaders from around the world to highlight the "brotherhood in Iraq," the government statement said.

In response to the growing threat to their community, Christian leaders in Iraq have established armed militias in northern Nineveh province and announced earlier this month they may form a coalition to run in the provincial council elections.

Iraq's Christians Form Militias to Combat Islamic Extremists

Courtesy of London Telegraph
27 July 2008
By Damien McElroy

Civilians in Christian villages in northern Iraq have established their own security in an attempt to deter murders, abductions and would-be car bombers.    Photo: AP

(ZNDA: Mosul)  In the five years since the Anglo-American invasion of 2003, murders and abductions have driven about half of the 800,000 Christians who once lived in Iraq to flee the country.

Checkpoints manned by civilians armed with heavy machine guns and assault rifles have received official backing in Christian villages on the Nineveh Plain in northern Iraq, where their presence dates back to the missions of St Thomas the apostle.

Father Yusuf Yohannes combines the duties of parish priest with overseeing security from a converted post office in the village of Karamlis, 10 miles east of the local capital, Mosul. Informal patrols by his parishioners started last year but the effort is now a fully-fledged operation, with 250 employees and official approval from the US army base in Mosul.

"We are facing the threat of wipe-out," he said. "I have not left this town in three years because of the danger. The situation here was like a bowl without a base for Christians, we were just tossed around. By establishing our own security we have the chance to stand steady again."

Radios supplied by the US-led coalition keeps the command post in touch with guards in Karamlis and three hamlets nearby. A heavy machine gun protrudes from the guardpost on St Barbara Street, pointing towards a road shared with Sunni Muslim neighbours. The gun's purpose, said Saleem Yusuf, the checkpoint commander, is to deter would-be car bombers. "We have not used it in anger yet. Thank God," he said.

Iraq's primate, Cardinal Emmanuel Delly, made a public plea for military assistance for "defenseless" Christians in March. The persecuted minority was at it lowest point, reeling after loss of the political protection it had enjoyed from previous regimes over the last century, ranging from British colonial authorities to Iraq's monarchy and Saddam Hussein's government.

But local politicians in Mosul opposed the obvious route to Christian self defense - the creation of militias, equipped and armed by the coalition, a model pivotal to the dramatic drop in violence elsewhere in Iraq.

These objections have now been dropped, but Christian village guards are still only authorised when they act as auxiliaries to the Iraqi police. Consequently, the guards in Karamlis are paid only £100 a month, compared with the £150 given to militiamen elsewhere in the country.

But the patrols have already had an impact. New buildings are going up in Christian areas and there is a renewed willingness to resist the demands of Muslim radicals. "Why should Christians face arrest for not fasting in Ramadan?" asked Fr Yusuf. "Why is it that women should cover their faces if God loves all human beings? We reject these things and want the right to our own culture."

Cardinal Delly was able to travel to Karamlis for an ordination last Friday. The man he raised to the priesthood symbolises the ordeal of Iraq's last Christians. Yusuf Rabat assumed the title "Father Paulos" in tribute to the late Archbishop of Mosul, Paulos Farai Rakha, who was kidnapped and murdered four months ago. Pictures of the dead Archbishop are pasted on lamposts across Karamlis.

Popular Council Rep. Admits to Receiving Kurdish Funds

Courtesy of the Assyrian International News Agency
24 July 2008

(ZNDA: Stockholm)  On 24 July, during a radio interview conducted by Sweden's Radio Qolo (The Voice Radio), Mr. Gibrael Marko, a representatives of the Popular Council of the Chaldean Syriac Assyrians - an Iraqi-based Assyrian organization - acknowledged that his organization receives Kurdish funding.

Radio Qolo is a radio program produced for the Assyrian community in Sweden. Mr. Marko reluctantly admitted during the radio interview that his organization, which was set up in 2007, receives regular funding from Kurdish sources, thus confirming the suspicions of other Assyrian political groups.

According to the publicly made aims of the Popular Council of the Chaldean Syriac Assyrians, the organization seeks to expand the Kurdish area to include Assyrian lands in the Nineveh plains. The group muscled great economic resources despite its fairly recent establishment and has been distributing food and other aid to Assyrian families who are encouraged to support the goals of the organization.

Chaldean Group Seeks Autonomous Rights in Northern Iraq

Courtesy of the UPI
24 July 2008

(ZNDA: Arbil)  Chaldean Christians in northern Iraq may be seeking autonomous rights and form a coalition to run in the provincial council elections, according the Kurdish Globe last week.

According to Mr. Zaia Petros, director of the Chaldean National Council, the Christian community would work to assert its rights in Iraq through representation in the provincial councils where the Chaldean and Assyrian communities live in northern Iraq.

"We will work in order to add Christian autonomy in the constitution and to make it acceptable to the many sides in the Kurdistan region and to officials in Baghdad," Mr. Petros said, adding the list could be called the National Ishtar List.

Petros said the Christian communities need to work with the Yezidi, Shabak, Kurds and Arabs in the region to form the list.

The Christian population in northern Iraq has slowly left the region since 2006, as there is no incentive to stay amid rising sectarian violence, Mr. Petros said.

The head of the Chaldean Cultural Assembly, Mr. Qazwan Alias, supported claims laid forth by Petros, noting Baghdad has not stepped in to alleviate the situation. "We think achieving Christian autonomy in the district is the only solution, especially after the efforts that the blocs and other sides have put forth," he said.

Sunni Sheikh Offers Support for Iraqi Christians

Photo taken by William McCallister on 14 December 2007 Sheikh Ahmad Al-Rishawi flanked by Maj Gen Allen (left) DCG, MNF-W and Maj Gen Gaskin (right) CG MNF-W.

(ZNDA:  Baghdad)  Zinda Magazine has learned that Sheikh Ahmad al-Rishawi, head of the Sahwah al-Iraq (The Awakening Movement), has offered protection for the Christians in the al-Anbar province and elsewhere in Iraq.

The Awakening Movement's forces patrol the streets to ward off any al-Qaeda activity or attacks.

According to some Arab media another Sunni leader, Sheikh Iyad has added the title of the "Protector of the Chaldean Catholics" to his titles.  According to a tribal tradition, a Chaldean will be regarded equal to that of a member of his tribe.  The killing of a Chaldean would then be treated as the murder of the Sheik's tribal member.

Moreover, money will be provided from the Sahawa al-Iraq treasury to rebuild the churches and cemeteries destroyed by al-Qaeda.

The Awakening Movement is a part of the on-going Surge Offensive implemented by General Patraous, US Commander of Multinational Forces in Iraq.

Bet-Kolia Says Christians Living A Good Life in Iran

Courtesy of Tehran Times
31 July 2008

(ZNDA: Tehran)  The Assyrian representative in Iran's Parliament (Majlis), Mr. Yonatan Bet Kolia, said today that religious minorities live in peace in Iran and are free to perform their religious ceremonies.

The MP also said the Iranian officials are committed to an equal treatment of minorities in the country.

The Christian lawmaker went on to say that religious minorities are ready to defend their country in the face of any foreign threat.

“They (minorities) are prepared to defend the country against any external attacks as they did so during the (1980-1988) Sacred Defense,” Bet-Kolia said in the opening ceremony of the Eighth Tammuz Festival in Urmia, Iran.

Four hundred Assyrian athletes from Armenia, Georgia, Iraq and Syria participated in this year's 10-day festival.

Chaldean Christians Hold World Youth Day in North Iraq

Courtesy of the Catholic Leader
1 August 2008

(ZNDA: Beirut)  When Iraqi youths were not granted visas for World Youth Day in Australia, Iraq's Chaldean Catholic bishops decided they would bring World Youth Day to Iraq.

The bishops organised processions, catechesis, the Way of the Cross and Masses in several northern Iraqi cities.

More than 6600 Iraqi youths participated in the alternative World Youth Day.

Chaldean Archbishop Louis Sako of Kirkuk, Iraq, invited Lebanese Capuchin Father Joseph Azzo to travel to Iraq for the July 16-20 gatherings.

Fr Azzo invited Lebanese singer Abir Nehme to accompany him.

Even a day before their departure from Lebanon on July 14, the small entourage of Fr Azzo and musicians still did not have the needed funds for their airfare to Iraq.

Fr Azzo said he prayed and, "miraculously, three benefactors came through just in time to pay" for a large portion of the trip.

Ms Nehme, a 26-year-old Maronite Catholic, said it was her dream "to go and see the Christians of Iraq and to do something for them".

Fr Azzo is no stranger to Iraq. The 42-year-old Chaldean Capuchin had visited 11 times before to preach to Iraqi Christians.

Ms Nehme said the experience was totally different than she had imagined.

Iraqi Christians "have so much love to give, so much innocence. So much purity," she said.

"They believe in tomorrow in a way that's amazing. They believe that tomorrow is a better day.

"You always see death and pain on TV's images of Iraq. We saw that. But we also saw peace, joy, hope, singing, music and living faith," Ms Nehme said.

Ms Nehme performed traditional Maronite and Syriac hymns and praise songs.

A French delegation from the peace movement Pax Christi also attended the gatherings.

The celebrations culminated with a Mass celebrated by Archbishop Sako at the Church of the Sacred Heart in Kirkuk on July 20.   About 2000 Iraqi youth attended.

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European Parliament Conference Highlights Assyrian Suffering in Iraq

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE 14 June 2008

Assyria Council of Europe
Brussels

On Wednesday 11 June 2008 more than 100 guests attended a conference at the European
Parliament in Brussels on the situation of the Assyrians in Iraq. The event was organized by the Assyria Council of Europe in cooperation with the European Peoples Party-European Democrats, the biggest bloc in the European Parliament, and touched on crucial issues and questions regarding the plight and future survival of Iraq’s indigenous people. Subjects discussed included the plight of Assyrian IDPs throughout Iraq, Art. 125 of the Iraqi Constitution and the protection of minorities, territorial and extra-territorial federalism, the situation of other Iraqi minorities, and EU aid to Iraq. The general consensus throughout the conference was that the situation of the Assyrians in Iraq is precarious and more must be done by the international community, including the EU, to protect the Assyrians.

His Eminence the Ambassador of Iraq to Brussels, Mr. Mohammed Al-Doreky, made it clear that it saddens him when Assyrians leave Iraq and that as the indigenous people of the land they have a right to remain on their ancestral homeland. In a very thought-provoking analysis, Dr. Willy Fautre of Human Rights Without Frontiers also discussed whether territorial federalism alone in Iraq will suffice to protect its minorities or whether there needs to be some kind of extra-territorial federalism also to ensure the survival and protection of minorities wherever they reside in the country. Mrs. Pascale Warda of the Hammorabi Human Rights Organization and the former Minister of Migration and Displacement, was adamant that the Iraqi government must do more to ensure the protection of the Assyrian Christian community and reminded all the participants that since 2003 at least 44 churches have been bombed throughout the country.

In addition to a good number of MEPs present at the conference, there were also representatives of various NGOs, journalists and representatives of other Iraqi minority communities. Furthermore, His Beatitude the Bishop of the Syriac Orthodox Church in Belgium, Severios Hazail Soumi, together with the Syriac Orthodox Church Bishop of Mosul, Severios Hawa, was also present at the event. In particular, His Beatitude Hazail Soumi asked the panelists why a safe haven in Iraq isn’t being created for the Christians whereas in the 1990’s steps were taken to protect the persecuted Kurdish and Shiite communities of Iraq. Mr. Ninos Warda, ACE Project Director stated that, ‘This event has been a profound success because it has raised the profile of the suffering of the Assyrians in Iraq in an institution which has on many occasions released resolutions expressing its concern for the suffering of these people.’

It should be noted that the Assyrian community in Iraq is made up of various denominations including the Syriac and Chaldean Catholic churches, the Assyrian Church of the East and the Ancient Church of the East, the Syriac Orthodox Church and also Protestant churches.

Ishaia Isho Ousted from AGC Exec Committee

(ZNDA: Chicago)  Based on a 'proclamation' dated 19 June the Executive Committee of the Assyrian General Conference (AGC) has determined that Mr. Ishaia Isho will no longer represent the said group and its executive members.  The following note was submitted to Zinda office in Washington on 19 June:

We would like to inform the supporters and friends of the Assyrian General Conference (AGC) that Mr. Ishaia Isho is no longer representing the Assyrian General Conference and its executive committee. Mr. Isho has caused numerous problems within the structure of the Conference and its executive committee. He is the person responsible for making individual decisions without consulting the executive committee and referencing the AGC internal bylaws. He has caused the closure of the Conference site for more than a month and caused the non-issuance of the Journal of the Conference for more than a year. The executive committee members took the responsibility upon themselves to re-open the site and try to issue the journal (Ashuriuon) if possible until the next AGC conference in order to put all things straight for the sake of our just cause and oppressed nation.                                       

Namrood Shiba
Assyrian General Conference - AGC

Swedish Parliament Refuses to Recognize 1915 Genocide

Courtesy of the AZG Armenian Daily
13 June 2008

(ZNDA: Stockholm)  On 12 June the Swedish Parliament, with 245 to 37 votes (1 abstain, 66 absent), rejected a call for recognition of the 1915 genocide in the Ottoman Empire.  The debate lasted over three hours.

On 11 June, Swedish MPs debated the report of the Foreign Committee on Human Rights and the including five motions calling upon the Swedish government and parliament to officially recognize the 1915 genocide.

A majority consisting of the ruling alliance parties together with the Social Democrats (opposition party) proposed that the motions be rejected, whereby the Green (Miljöpartiet) and the Left (Vänsterpartiet) parties announced their reservations, forcing the Parliament to have a debate in the main chamber before the proposal was voted on.

The motion to recognize the genocide was rejected based on four main assumptions:

- "…no particular consideration regarding the Armenian situation has ever been in form of an UN Resolution, either in 1985 or any other occasion."

- "The Committee understands that what engulfed the Armenians, Assyrian/Syrians and Chaldeans during the reign of the Ottoman Empire would, according to the 1948 Convention, probably be regarded as genocide, if it had been in power at the time."

- "There is still a disagreement among the experts regarding the different course of events of the dissolution of the Ottoman Empire. The same applies to the underlying causes and how the assaults shall be classified."

- [in regard to the development in Turkey] "…in the time being, it would be venturesome to disturb an initiate and delicate national process." [which could fuel the extremists in the country]

Mr. Yilmaz Kerimo, Assyrian and an MP in the Swedish parliament defied his own party - Social Democrats - and defended the recognition of the 1915 genocide.

Visiting Iraqi Christians Tell Exiles in Australia to Stay Strong

Courtesy of the Age
28 June 2008
By Julie Szego

(ZNDA: Sydney)  Iraqi Christians George Eshaq and Romel Moshi bring a message of stubborn optimism to their exiled compatriots in Australia. "We tell them, 'Keep your connection with your people back in Iraq'," Mr Moshi says. "We hope and believe Iraq will be peaceful one day … and maybe then you can come back."

The two members of Iraq's Assyrian Democratic Movement — a party representing the country's Assyrian and Chaldean Catholic minorities that holds seats in the federal parliament — know they face an uphill battle selling this line. Despite their tiny numbers, since Saddam's fall Iraqi Christians have found themselves at the front line of the battle for Iraq's soul.

Seeking help: Iraqi Christians George Eshaq and Romel Moshi (centre) with Melbourne Assyrian community members Valentine Aghajani (left) and Wilson Kando (right). Photo: Roger Cummins

Their religion makes them an easy target for Islamist fanatics, while insurgents have tended to single them out as "collaborators" with the US military. It is estimated that since the US-led war almost half of Iraq's 1 million or so Christians have been forced to flee, with hundreds of thousands stranded in Syria and Jordan. Australia recently announced it would lift its refugee intake by 500 in the coming year and leaders from Melbourne's Assyrian community, such as Wilson Kando and Valentine Aghajani, believe their people stand to benefit.

Emissaries Moshi and Eshaq are in Melbourne to rally distant supporters — their party scored about 8000 votes in the 2005 Iraqi elections from Australian expatriates — and feast at places such as the Babylonian-themed Aghadeer restaurant in Brunswick.

"Their position is not to encourage the Assyrian and Chaldean community to leave Iraq," Mr Kando says. "But our people are stuck in Syria and Jordan for years, our children have sacrificed their education, our women have been forced into prostitution."

Mr Moshi and Mr Eshaq have themselves endured a rocky journey, which began in the 1990s when they joined forces with Kurdish reformers in the semi-autonomous north. After Saddam's fall in 2003 they joined a Christian militia and patrolled a country descending into anarchy. Eventually they reached Baghdad where their comrades had occupied the former headquarters of Saddam's notorious paramilitary group, the Fedayeen. They bunkered down as shadowy forces picked off Christian and civil society leaders. Catholic clerics were murdered, along with many Assyrian Democratic Movement activists.

Mr Eshaq, who still lives in the movement's Baghdad headquarters, says of the recent drop in violence that has followed the "surge" of US troops: "A few months ago we never left the base. Now we go out until the evening; in the shops, in town, there's more freedom now, more safety." Mr Moshi says there's also fresh hope for national reconciliation since the Iraqi Government launched a military campaign in March against radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr's Mahdi Army. "The Sunni minority began to change then, they felt encouraged." The two want US troops to stay for as long as the Iraqi army and police force need backing.

But what of their movement's aim of building a secular, democratic Iraq that safeguards minority rights? "It's very difficult," Mr Moshi concedes. Says Mr Eshaq: "We believe the only thing that will change the minds of religious people to be secular is economic progress. It's very easy for someone who doesn't feel like they lead a comfortable life to kill and be killed."

Assyrian Actuary Swims Across the English Channel

Kiase Stephan successfully swam across the English Channel on 13 July.

(ZNDA: Sydney)  The Assyrian swimmer, Kaise Stephan, successfully swam the English Channel in 12.5 hours on Sunday, 13 July.

Mr. Stephan left Dover Beach at 2:30 PM and arrived in France at 3:00 AM on Monday, 2 July14. His total swim path was around 35 kilometers long.

"After a quick photo shoot on the beach with support swimmer Ryan [Ainley] and the [Australian] flags, he returned back to the boat very cold and emotional in disbelief, relief and joy,''  said Mr. Hanna Stephan, Kaise's brother.

Mr Stephan said his brother had been "sleeping on the boat ever since'' and was to go to bed once back on shore.

During the swim, cargo ships and ferries passed alongside Mr Stephan.

To keep his energy levels high, he was fed bananas, diced fruit salads, water, energy drinks and power bars. The water temperature was 15 degrees.

Mr Stephan trained for 2 years before swimming the Channel - from England to France - to raise money for the Children's Hospital at Westmead.

Before the Channel swim, Mr Stephan, who is an actuary with Munich Re, had swum just six kilometres in open water.

He decided to take up the challenge after witnessing his cousin, Mark, successfully battle leukaemia at the hospital.  Mr. Stephan is the son of Dr. Said Stephan, a former president of the Assyrian Australian Academic Society (TAAAS) and the current president of the Assyrian Aid Society in Australia.

For more information click here.    To view a promotional video on YouTube click here.

Assyrian Beauty Reaches Finals at Mrs. World Contest

Monalisa Lazarof, represented Iran at the Mrs. World 2008 contest in Russia in June.

(ZNDA: Los Angeles)  On 30 June the annual beauty contest for beautiful married women, titled Mrs World, was held in Kaliningrad, Russia.  Mrs. Ukraine, Nataliia Shmarenkova, was crowned Mrs. World 2008.  Among the top 10 finalists was the beautiful Mrs. Iran, Monalisa Lazarof, an Assyrian from Southern California.

Monalisa Lazarof was born in the city of Shiraz, Iran in 1966. Her father, Mikhail Khachi, was a mechanical engineer and the head of Engineering Department at the National Iranian Oil Company (Sherkat-e Melee Naft-e Iran).

Her mother, Valentine Daniel Vardeh, taught as a professor at the All-Girls College (Madrese Auli Dokhtaran), teaching fashion design.  Monalisa left Iran in 1978 when her fathered was sent on assignment to London, England.

Her family moved to several European countries until they settled in the United States in 1980, where Monalisa graduated from high school in San Mateo, California and then completed her Bachelors in Business Administration with a Minor in Entreprenership at California State University.

In 1989 Monalisa married Dr. Sargon Lazarof, a past clinical professor at the University of Southern California school of Dentistry and the inventor of the Sargon Immediate Load Implant.   Monalisa began working in 1995 as the Regulatory Affairs and Quality Assurance manager at Sargon Enterprises.

Mr. and Mrs. Lazarof have two daughters, Rebecca, 11, and Sagonia, 14. 

Monalisa is very active in charities, such as The Las Floristas Children’s Charities, the Breast Cancer Foundation and her daughters' schools.  

Monalisa's hobbies are Hatha Yoga, dancing, making custom jewelry, cooking gourmet foods and interior designing.

Final Statement of Mor Jacob of Edessa Symposium

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE 9 June 2008

Aleppo, Syria

The Symposium commemorating the 1300th anniversary of the passing away of Mor Jacob of Edessa, the prominent Syrian polymath was held in Aleppo, Syria, June 9 – 12th, 2008.

Click above photo to enter official website

The Participants who came from Austria, Canada, Germany, Netherlands, Turkey, United Kingdom and the United States as well as Lebanon and Syria enjoyed the papers presented at the Symposium, included contributions from scholars and specialists in Syriac studies.  These contributions, which included twelve papers that were delivered in five sessions, discussed the writings of the celebrated scholar Mor Jacob of Edessa as a chronicler, man of letters, grammarian, exegete, theologian, and as a major contributor to church liturgy and canon law.

The proceedings of the Symposium also included an opening session in which a welcoming address was delivered by Mor Gregorios Yohanna Ibrahim, Metropolitan of Aleppo and a keynote lecture by Prof. Dr. Malphono Sebastian Brock, as well as a final session.

The Symposium programme included visits to a number of archaeological locations of Syrian monasteries that for centuries were beacons of knowledge.  These included the Monastery of Tell’Ada, where Mor Jacob lived the last ten years of his celebrated life, and where he died and was buried on June 5th, 708; the Monastery of St. Simeon the Stylite, a major fifth century cathedral that was named after St. Simeon the Stylite, the founder of the Stylite Monastic practice; the recently uncovered Monastery of Qenneshrin, which was founded by Yohanna Bar Aphtonia in 538 and which remained active up to the thirteenth century; and the town of Mabug, the birth place of Theodora, the Syrian Queen, and the seat of Mor Philoxenus of Mabug ( + 523).

In its final session, the Symposium resolved the following:

  1. The proceedings of the Symposium will be published in English by Gorgias Press and in Arabic by Mardin Publishing House.  The full texts of the papers should be submitted to Gorgias Press by October 1st, 2008 and the Arabic translation of the texts to be completed by March 1st, 2009.
  2. Encouraged by the immense success of the Symposium and in order to promote continuity in the study of the Syriac literary heritage, and in recognition of Aleppo’s special place in this heritage, it was decided to hold a series of colloquia, each under the title Aleppo Syriac Colloquium (A.S.C.), every two years.  Each colloquium will be devoted to one theme or studying the works of one renowned historic Syriac Scholar.  The subject of the colloquium will be defined one year in advance and expert scholars will be invited to participate.  In this respect it was resolved to hold the next colloquium during the second half of June, 2010 in Aleppo and will address the work of the outstanding Syrian polymath Mor Gregorios Yohanna Abu al-Faraj Barhebraeus (+1286).
  3. The participants expressed their profound appreciation and thanks to the host of the Symposium, Mor Gregorios Yohanna Ibrahim, for his initiative to hold the Symposium, for his tireless efforts, which ensured its complete success, and for the generous hospitality.  As a token of this appreciation, the participants presented His Eminence with a book authored by George Kiraz that included on its initial pages hand written notes that expressed their appreciation.  The participants also expressed their deep thanks to the secretariat of the Symposium, to the monks and deacons and members of the different working groups of the Aleppo Syrian Orthodox Archdiocese, particularly the board of trustees of St George Church in Hay Al-Syrian, which accommodated the venue of the Symposium.

LIST OF THE SCHOLARS

  1. Metropolitan Mar Gregorios Yohanna Ibrahim (Syria)
  2. Prof. Dr. Malphono Sebastian Brock (UK)
  3. Fr. Dr. Abdo Badwi (Lebanon)
  4. Prof. Dr. Khalid Dinno (Canada)
  5. Prof. Dr. Theresia Hainthaler (Germany)
  6. Prof. Dr. Amir Harrak (Canada)
  7. Dr. Andrea Juckle (Germany)
  8. Dr. George Kiraz (USA)
  9. Rev. Dr. Richard Price (UK)
  10. Prof. Dr. Alison Salvesen (UK)
  11. Dr. Aho Shemunkasho (Austria)
  12. Rev. Dr. Columba Stewart (USA)
  13. Jack Tannous (USA)

Assyrian Flag Shows Up at Euro 2008 Soccer Game

(ZNDA: Vienna)  On 12 June, to the astonishment of many Assyrian viewers of the Euro Cup soccer games held in Austria, an enormous flag of the Assyrian nation was seen waving in the crowd. 

Nineteen minutes into the soccer match between Croatia and Germany, played in Klagenfurt, Austria, the camera follows the German Player, Lukas Podolski, and suddenly the large Assyrian flag appears in the background.  To view the footage click here (YouTube Video).

2009 Christians in Ottoman Empire Conference in Canada

Courtesy of the PanArmenian.net
13 June 2008

(ZNDA: Toronto)   In a reception organized by the Canada-based Union of Middle East Christians to honor Arman Hakobian, Armenia’s Charge d’Affairs in Canada, it was noted that the Armenian Embassy may be possibly sponsoring an international conference titled the "Christians in Ottoman Empire" in 2009.

The Union of Middle East Christians includes the Coptic Orthodox and Catholic Churches, Chaldean and Assyrian Orthodox Churches and a number of others.

Pulitzer Prize-winning Cartoonist Gary Trudeau Lampoons Coverage of Assyrian refugees

Courtesy of Christianity Today
15 July 2008
by Susan Wunderink

Gary B. Trudeau’s Doonesbury, which newspapers publish either with the comics or the editorial cartoons, just wrapped up a series about Iraqi Christian refugees. Roland (in this series a Fox News correspondent) is trying to cover the story of an Assyrian family in a way that is flattering for the Surge. Doonesbury treats the imaginary Iraqis with a great deal of dignity. Fox News doesn’t fare so well.

Fox News actually did run an Associated Press story about “Christians Fleeing Violence in Iraq” in early May, which brings up the matter of ransoms most Christians pay for "protection."

The background--not in the comic strips, although alluded to--is that Iraq’s Christians, the largest non-Muslim religious group in Iraq , are represented disproportionately in the refugee population (although it should be mentioned that the Assyrian diaspora dates back to World War I). It's such a huge drain that some churches in Iraq have no members left. Christians can be identified by their names and ID cards, and they are often targeted for violence. The Assyrian International News Agency (AINA) is calling it genocide. So, many Assyrians leave as soon as they can. Others, like the family in Doonesbury, wait until something unbearable happens.

 
 

CT suggested in an editorial that U.S. and Iraqi governments should:

Stop discrimination in aid grants by naming a special aid coordinator in Iraq to insure that Christians and other minorities receive a fair share of international assistance.

Implement the creation of a homeland for Christians in Iraq's Nineveh Plains to be governed jointly by Christians and other minority groups. (This is provided for under article 125 of Iraq's new constitution.)

Provide more comprehensive care for the estimated 3 million Iraqi refugees and internally displaced people. The United States should follow through with its commitment to resettle more refugees from Iraq. In 2006, only 202 were resettled, while a total of 20,000 had been authorized.

Remove religious affiliation from identification cards. There could hardly be an easier way to protect the lives of Christian civilians, such as Ayad Tariq, than issuing new ID cards minus religious labels.

AINA divides Assyrians up into five groups: Chaldeans (of the Chaldean Catholic Church) at 45 percent, Syriac Orthodox at 26 percent, Church of the East at 19 percent, Syriac Catholic at 4 percent, and other groups at 6 percent. In 2005, 2 percent of Iraq's population was Christian, according to the World Christian Database.

CT published an article on Iraqi Christian refugees in 2006.

Iraqi Bishop Protests World Youth Day Visa Denials

Courtesy of the Catholic News Agency
14 July 2008

(ZNDA: Sydney)  Chaldean Iraqi Bishop Philip Najim has accused the Australian government officials of "mistrust and bureaucracy" in approving only 30 out of over 170 visa applications for World Youth Day.

Catholic News Agency reports the Australian government has denied visas to dozens of World Youth Day pilgrims from Iraq, citing concerns that participants will not return home and instead will seek asylum in Australia.

One Chaldean Catholic priest called the decision "a slap at young people who wanted to go to witness to the faith and the joy of the Church’s living in Iraq despite sufferings."

Initially the Australian government denied visas for nearly 170 pilgrims, allowing only ten visas to aspiring World Youth Day participants, the SIR News Agency says. According to the website Baghdadhope, there are now only about 30 total visas available that will be granted "in extremis".

Father Rayan P. Atto, parish priest of Mar Qardagh Church in Arbil, told SIR News Agency that the concerns about asylum seekers were unfounded, arguing that, "for young Christian Iraqis, taking part in the WYD in Sydney was not a way to leave their country."

"Most of the group members come from northern Iraq, a quiet area," he continued. "They have no reason to escape and they would certainly not do it on an occasion related to faith."

Before it was reported that 30 visas would be available for pilgrims, Father Atto said the Australian Embassy in Amman, Jordan had approved only ten visas. "How can one reduce a group of almost 170 people down to just ten?" he asked.

The news of the 30 total visas did not satisfy Bishop Philip Najim, Chaldean Procurator to the Holy See.

"This is a real scandal, a slap at young people who wanted to go to witness to the faith and the joy of the Church's living in Iraq despite sufferings," Bishop Najim said, speaking to MISNA news agency.

"The dream of young Iraqis to participate in World Youth Day in Sydney shatters against the wall of mistrust and of bureaucracy, after the Australian embassy in Amman completely denied the visas in the beginning and then, today, granted 30 entry visas to the country… just 30, of which 12 are for religious and only 18 for young boys and girls, on a list of 170 people delivered since last year."

"The refusal of the entry visas to the young Iraqis who wished to attend the World Youth Day makes us very sad," said Chaldean Bishop Jibrail Kassab of the Eparchy of Oceania and New Zealand.

The Australian Embassy said that political, not economic reasons motivated their decision. The embassy said that in most cases the documents concerning the employment and financial situation of the pilgrims are missing.

However, CNA says that the embassy is reported to have been informed that the Church would guarantee the visa applicants’ expenses.

AAS-A Set to Achieve BBB 'Seal of Approval'

Courtesy of the Assyrian Aid Society - America
3 July 2008

(ZNDA: San Francisco)  The Assyrian Aid Society of America (AAS-A) is in the process of receiving Better Business Bureau (BBB) recognition as a national charity that adheres to the BBB's strong and comprehensive Standards for Charity Accountability, to clearly assure our donors and supporters that AAS-A is financially responsible, accountable, and trustworthy.

At it's meeting in Detroit on March 1, 2008 the AAS-A Board of Directors adopted a list of bylaw revisions written specifically to address the BBB standards, including institution of annual independent financial audits and requiring the Board to meet three times each year instead of only once.

The BBB standards are rigorous and demanding, having been developed to evaluate large non-profit charity corporations with multi-million dollar annual budgets. While AAS-A is not a multi-million dollar corporation, we invited those same standards to be applied to us in order to maintain the confidence of our donors as well as to make AAS-A a better organization.

AAS-A  has worked diligently with BBB representatives to insure that we are taking all of the necessary steps to meet their standards. We look forward to conducting that third Board of Directors meeting in November and thus being in full compliance with the standards of the Better Business Bureau Wise Giving Alliance.

No other Assyrian charity organization has met the Better Business Bureau standards. We encourage them all to join us in pursuing this noble achievement.

Daylight and Darkness in a Baghdad Women's Home

Courtesy of the Washington Post
7 July 2008
By Andrea Bruce

(ZNDA: Baghdad)  Doris Yunan sits in the empty dining room where the sun can find her. With help from the wind, shapes and shadows tease her from the picture window. The sun winks at her from behind a bowing date palm. The light creates a sensation that sometimes, she says, overcomes her blindness.

Doris, 83, sits here in her regular spot especially when she prays. Arabic romance movies play in the next room, keeping the attention of 14 other elderly women who live at Beit Anya, a charity home in Baghdad run by Christians.

The home takes in women left abandoned by death or family or war. Most are old, some are handicapped. Before the war, when the home was opened, there were only four women living here. Now there are 47.

"When it hurts, I can't see anything," Doris says. "But now it is not hurting me, so I can see a little."

Eve Peters, a 21-year-old volunteer, sits half a table away, just in case.

Doris says it's nerve damage. She can't see the walled courtyard outside the window, the well-watered rose bushes or the hundreds of garlic bulbs hanging off the wrought-iron fence. But every morning she wraps a scarf around her head perfectly, in the traditional Assyrian style.

Her story is similar to those of most of the women here.

She married a widower. When he died four years ago, her stepsons escaped the war, leaving the country and abandoning her on the streets of Baghdad.

She lived on a bench in a church for a year before moving into Beit Anya.

Three times a day, she sits in one of the plastic chairs in the dining room, surrounded by walls lined with cheap prints of Bible scenes, and prays, one bead after another, with her rosary.

No one visits her.

Iraqi Refugees Condemn EU Decision on Their Intake

Courtesy of the Deutsche Welle
25 July 2008  
                                                                                        

(ZNDA: Brussels)  The German push came at an EU Interior Ministers meeting last week in Brussels in which it was agreed to delay any decision on increasing Iraqi refugee intake until September.

The move aroused anger of many refugees who fled violence in Iraq.

"Germany has the right to refuse to take us in but it cannot ask other countries to deny the humanity of welcoming refugees," said one refugee.

Some Iraqi refugees think that the EU decision was influenced by Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, who is seeking to bring Iraqis back home.

The refugees however say returning to Iraq would not be easy as most of them have had their homes appropriated by others after they fled.

Meanwhile, some Iraqi Christian refugees think that the EU offer to take them in has come a bit too late. "Why didn't it come in mid-2005 when killings and acts of violence were taking place," said one 61-year-old refugee.

Every month, Germany takes in an average of 600-700 Iraqi refugees, most of them Christians.

The EU decision was also criticized by the evangelical church in Germany and some human rights groups including Amnesty International.

Assyrian Man Arrested for Drug Trafficking Through
US-Canada Border

Courtesy of the Ottawa Citizen
30 July 2008

(ZNDA: Ottawa)  An Assyrian resident of Windsor, Canada faces federal drug charges after U.S. border guards at the Ambassador Bridge found more than 17 kilograms of ecstasy in the spare tire of his minivan. "

A tire normally has a hollow sound -- this one didn't. It was a thud," said Chief Ron Smith.  Adwar Odisho, 43, told border agents he was going to the United States to purchase auto parts but they became suspicious when a device designed to measure tire density produced a high reading.

A sniffer dog also reacted to the tire.  Mr. Odisho has been turned over to U.S. Immigration and Customs agents.

Chaldean Festival Set for August 9 - 10

Chaldean Festival set for Aug. 9-10
30 July 2008
By Jennie Miller

(ZNDA: Detroit)  Embracing culture and tradition, and thriving with family fun, the local Chaldean community is inviting the masses to once again share in its celebration during the annual Chaldean Festival.

The event is set for Saturday and Sunday, 9-10 August, from 2 p.m. to 11 p.m. on the front lawn of the Southfield Municipal Complex.

“We have such a large community and a very rich culture,” said Lisa Kalou, director of operations and events for the Chaldean-American Chamber of Commerce, based in Farmington Hills. She added that according to a recent household survey conducted by United Way and Walsh College, there are 120,000 Chaldeans in the metropolitan Detroit area.

“With this event, we wanted to put ourselves out there and show everyone our culture,” Kalou said of the third annual event.

The chamber, which has 1,200 members and represents the greater Chaldean business community in southeastern Michigan, organizes the event in partnership with the city of Southfield.

“It is a wonderful couple of days,” said Martin Manna, executive director of the chamber. “We’re very happy with the partnership with the city of Southfield. Being the center of it all, Southfield is a good place for us, because it’s also the home of the Chaldean Catholic (diocesan center) and the Chaldean Senior Home. We have a large Chaldean population, and Southfield is very central.”

The celebration is not just for the Chaldean crowd; all are welcome to attend, with a major purpose being to expose the masses to Chaldean culture, such as music, dances and food. There will be an estimated 100 food and merchant booths set up on the front lawn of the Civic Center.

“It’s great to see people attend this event, try our food, hear our music,” Manna said. “I think there is often a misconception about our community, and this is a wonderful opportunity (to dispel that misconception). Once we experience people’s cultures, we can gain a better understanding.”

The event is filled with fun for all ages, with children’s activities such as a dunk tank, a rock climbing wall and inflatables. There is also a raffle with a $10,000 grand prize.

“It’s a very fun, festive event,” Manna said, adding that an estimated 25,000 people came out to last year’s shindig. “We think that’s just going to continue to increase in our third year. It’s just getting bigger and bigger.”

The city is thrilled to host this event for the third time.

“We’ve always had a great relationship with the organization,” said Bill Waterhouse, director of the Southfield Parks and Recreation Department. “It’s a good time to come out and celebrate a little family fun. Whether or not someone is from the city of Southfield or the metro Detroit area, and whether or not they’re a part of the Chaldean community or just the general population, the Chaldean Festival has always celebrated families in a very special way. (It’s a chance) to come and learn a little bit about someone else’s culture.”

Admission is free, bu