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Massacre at a Syriac Church in Baghdad during Mass From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In the 2010 Baghdad church massacre, six suicide bombers of the Islamic State of Iraq (ISI) militant group attacked a Syriac Catholic church in Baghdad during Sunday evening Mass, on 31 October, 2010, and began killing the worshipers. ISI was a militant group which aimed to overthrow the Iraqi federal government and establish an Islamic state in Iraq.[5]
2010 Baghdad church massacre | |
---|---|
Part of Iraqi insurgency (2003–2011) | |
Location | Baghdad, Iraq |
Date | 31 October 2010, 17:00[1] – ~21:30 (UTC+4) |
Target | The Sayidat al-Nejat[2] ("Our Lady of Deliverance") Syriac Catholic Church[3] |
Attack type | Raid; hostage holding; killing due to religious ideas |
Deaths | Two priests; 39–44 worshippers; 7–12 police/security; 5 bystanders; all (perhaps six) jihadi attackers |
Injured | 78[4] |
Perpetrators | Islamic State of Iraq |
Hours later Iraqi commandos stormed the church. In the ensuing confrontation, fifty-eight worshipers, priests, policemen, and bystanders were killed and seventy-eight were wounded or maimed. World leaders and some Iraqi Sunni and Shi'ite imams condemned the massacre.
In late November 2010, Huthaifa al-Batawi, who was accused of masterminding the assault, was arrested along with eleven others in connection with the attack. During a failed attempt to escape in May 2011, Batawi and ten other senior ISI militants were killed by an Iraqi SWAT team.[6] On 2 August 2011, three other men were sentenced to death and a fourth to 20 years in prison in connection with the massacre. In 2012, an appeals court confirmed the sentences.[7]
After 19 March 2003 invasion of Iraq by a U.S.-led coalition aiming to destroy Iraq's Ba'athist government of President Saddam Hussein, the occupying forces on 21 April 2003 installed the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA) for temporary governance. On 28 June 2004 the CPA installed the Iraqi Interim Government, consisting of Iraqis and headed by Prime Minister Ayad Allawi, a Shia Muslim.
After the Iraqi parliamentary elections of December 2005, which saw a high turnout of 80%, a broad coalition government was formed consisting of the four largest parties: the Shi'ite National Iraqi Alliance (or United Iraqi Alliance), the Kurdish Democratic Patriotic Alliance of Kurdistan (DPAK), the Sunni Iraqi Accord Front (or Tawafuq), and the diverse Iraqi National List. This government was headed by Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, a Shia Muslim sworn in on 20 May 2006.
On 7 March 2010, new parliamentary elections had taken place, but a new government had not yet been formed.
In 1999, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi started his group Jama'at al-Tawhid wal-Jihad ("Organization of Monotheism and Jihad") with the purpose of toppling so-called "apostate" Arab regimes like the Jordanian monarchy.[8]
Half a year after the March 2003 invasion of Iraq, Zarqawi had turned his main attention to Iraq, and forged himself a reputation for beheadings and a suicide bombing campaign against Shiite religious targets and Sunni civilians.[8] He had also attacked UN representatives and the Jordanian embassy in Baghdad (August 2003) and killed or beheaded nine foreign hostages (May–October 2004).[9][10]
In October 2004, Zarqawi pledged bay'ah (allegiance) to Osama bin Laden of Al-Qaeda, and renamed his group Tanzim Qaidat al-Jihad fi Bilad al-Rafidayn, more popularly known as al-Qaeda in Iraq (AQI), or al-Qaeda in the Land of Two Rivers, or al-Qaeda in Mesopotamia.[8] Killings continued as before.[11]
In January 2006, AQI became part of a larger umbrella organization Mujahideen Shura Council (MSC). On 13 October 2006, MSC declared its rebranding and the establishment of the Islamic State of Iraq organization.[12] After this declaration, claims of responsibility for killings under the name of MSC gradually ceased and were replaced by claims from the Islamic State of Iraq organization.
Christians are believed to have lived in Iraq since the first century AD. In 2003, Iraq counted one million Christians according to The New York Times[13] on a population of 26 million;[14] the estimate of Syriac Catholic officials was then 2½ million Christians.[4]
Between 2003 and 2007, 40% of the refugees fleeing Iraq were Christian.[14][15] By November 2010, half of the Christians of 2003 had left Iraq[13] and 600,000 still remained according to BBC[16] (although Chaldean Cardinal Emmanuel III Delly estimated that 1½ million Christians remained).[4]
On 1 August 2004, six churches in Baghdad and Mosul were attacked simultaneously with bombs killing 12 people and wounding many others.[17] The Sayidat al-Nejat[2] (or "Our Lady of Salvation") Syriac Catholic[3] church in Karrada, a middle-class district in Baghdad with many Christian churches, was one of the churches attacked with a car bomb, killing two people and wounding 90.[2] The 2004 attacks were claimed by a previously unknown group, but the claim could not be verified.[17]
In August 2006, 13 Assyrian Christian women in Baghdad were kidnapped and murdered.[15] Between December 2004 and December 2006, another 27 churches in Iraq were attacked or bombed.[15] Christians were targets of violence and often kidnapped to force relatives to pay ransom.[14] The United States Commission on International Religious Freedom said in 2007 that Christians were among the most vulnerable groups in Iraq.[14]
In the beginning of September 2010, the Reverend Terry Jones in Gainesville, Florida, U.S., announced he would burn a Quran on 11 September 2010. A team from The New York Times went to the Sayidat al-Nejat Syrian Catholic church in Baghdad and noticed concrete bollards, razor wire, and oil drums filled with cement barricading the entrance—apparently the church was preparing for the worst.
The Times journalists spoke there with Father Thaer Abdal, who said he was worried that the threatened Quran-burning would cause Christians in Iraq to be targeted again after a period of relative calm, and said:
I would like to send a message to the pastor who is in America; he lives in a society that protects humans and religious beliefs. Why would he want to harm Christians in Iraq? This is dangerous. He should realize that we live in cultures of various denominations, especially in Iraq.[2]
On Sunday 31 October 2010 at 5pm,[16] at dusk,[18] four men 'in military uniforms' (as a nearby resident described later) got out of a black SUV in front of the Iraq Stock Exchange in Baghdad.[19] Baghdad's security spokesman Al-Moussawi later said that the men had been disguised as guards working for a private security firm and had carried fake IDs, which may have enabled them to approach despite checkpoints in the vicinity.[18] They were wearing suicide vests and fought off security forces at the stock exchange, killing two guards who tried to stop them from raiding the building.[20] In this attack four passersby were also killed.[19]
Then three other men arrived in an ordinary car, and all seven men jumped over the wall into the Sayidat al-Nejat ("Our Lady of Salvation") Syriac Catholic Church[2] across the road from the Stock Exchange[16] around 6pm during Sunday Mass, armed with machine guns, explosive belts,[19] and grenades.[3] They detonated their ordinary car,[19] clashed with guards and killed some,[16] and burst through the church's huge wooden doors[21] which they closed.[19] While they came in, some 19 people managed to leave the church.[20] Sources gave the number of attackers as six[16] or as 6 to 15.[13]
Worshipers, about 100, were herded to the centre of the church by the gunmen, but a priest led another 60 to the sacristy at the back of the church. The gunmen turned the lights off and began shooting around the church[22] and at the congregation,[13] with Rev. Thaer Abdal being killed at the altar. The gunmen "were just youths", said a 26-year-old woman. The gunmen said they were avenging "the burning of the Qur'an and the jailing of Muslim women in Egypt".[3][21] Meanwhile, they phoned TV station Al-Baghdadia, claimed the attack for Islamic State of Iraq (ISI),[19] and requested Al-Baghdadia to broadcast that they wanted to negotiate.[16]
Around 8.30 pm Iraqi security forces and 3rd Platoon, Alpha battery, TF 1-41, 3ID, U.S. Army from Fort Stewart, Georgia stormed the church since, as Iraqi Defence Minister al-Obeidi explained, gunmen threatened to kill all hostages.[13][16] Dozens of security forces[19] blew open the church doors and stormed inside.[3][20] As the Iraqi forces rushed in, the gunmen opened fire on the hostages in the church,[3] causing mass slaughter.[21] In the basement a gunman killed 30 hostages, either with two grenades or with an explosive vest he was wearing.[18][19] Reports give differing numbers for those killed: as 58[21] (and 50[3] or 78[4] wounded); or as 44 worshippers, two priests, and seven security force personnel killed;[7] or as 39 worshipers, two priests, 12 policemen, and five bystanders outside the church.[4] All six attackers were killed.[16] An Iraqi police officer gave a vivid account of the human carnage.[1]
Afterwards, Islamic State of Iraq (ISI) posted an audio message on a jihadist website again claiming responsibility for the attack, and calling for the release of two Egyptian female Muslims who they alleged were being held against their will in Coptic Christian monasteries in Egypt (see also Kamilia Shehata: an Egyptian Christian woman, allegedly converted to Islam, allegedly returned by police to her family).[20][21]
In probably that same Internet statement, ISI also called the church "the dirty den of idolatry",[2] said that a deadline now expired for Egypt's Coptic church to free those two women purportedly held captive in monasteries,[23] that the fuse of a campaign against Iraqi Christians had been lit,[2] and therefore now declared "all Christian centers, organizations and institutions, leaders and followers to be legitimate targets for the mujahedeen wherever they can reach them".[23] ISI, referring to the alleged Muslim women held captive in monasteries, also wrote: "Let these idolaters, and at their forefront the hallucinating tyrant of the Vatican, know that the killing sword will not be lifted from the necks of their followers until they declare their innocence from what the dog of the Egyptian Church is doing ... [and] pressure this belligerent church to release the captive women from the prisons of their monasteries".[23] A video showing five suicide bombers wearing their vests and reading their last statements was later released by the Islamic State of Iraq. Four of the attackers were from different Arab countries and one was Iraqi.[24]
U.S. Army spokesman Bloom assumed the whole incident was a "robbery gone wrong. We've seen them resort to robbery to get financed. It has been very challenging for them to get outside financing, so they are resorting to small, petty crimes to try to finance themselves".[20]
The opposite view was expressed by the Tehran Times, which suggested that the initial assault on the Stock Exchange building may have been only an attempt to divert attention from their real target: the church.[18] The BBC also assumed that the church had been the real target.[16]
On 31 October 2010, an unspecified number of suspects were arrested.[1] As standard procedure after high-profile attacks, the police commander in charge of the district was also detained for questioning.[18]
On 1 November 2010, the building of TV station Al-Baghdadia that had been contacted by the militants (supra, ISI claim) was taken over by government troops. The station was taken off air, the director and an employee arrested on vague charges, but released after 24 hours.[16]
Late November 2010, Huthaifa al-Batawi, known as ISI's "Emir of Baghdad", was arrested along with 11 others in connection with 31 October assault on Our Lady of Salvation church.
Batawi was accused of master-minding the assault and was locked up in a counter-terrorism jail complex in Baghdad's Karrada district. During a failed attempt to escape in May 2011, Batawi and 10 other senior ISI militants were killed by an Iraqi SWAT team.[6]
Three other men were sentenced to death and a fourth to 20 years in prison, on 2 August 2011, in connection with that 31 October 2010 massacre. In 2012 an appeals court confirmed the sentences.[7]
On October 31, 2019, the Archdiocese of Baghdad began the canonization process for 48 Catholics who died during the attack.[40][41] On March 5, 2021, Pope Francis visited the church where the attack occurred.[42]
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