By Niqash
Mustafa Habib
Mustafa Habib
Last week a doctor, his wife and their mother were killed in Baghdad.
Four men apparently broke into the Christian family’s home, robbed them
and then stabbed them. The authorities say it was most likely a criminal act,
with robbery being the main motivation, but many Christians in Iraq see
it as just the latest crime against them, with a sectarian motivation.
A number of Christian groups and churches condemned the act and
called on the Iraqi government to better protect those of their faith in
Iraq. In many ways, it is just another sign of how much things have
changed for Iraqi Christians in their homeland over the past few years.
Those changes are also reflected in politics.
There are five seats in the Iraqi parliament set aside for Iraqi
Christian politicians, to represent their minority. In the past,
Christian political parties all used to unite during the elections, but
this year will be different. There are eight competing electoral
alliances contesting for votes.
Although various actors, including the country’s own church leaders,
have tried to get the parties to unite, their attempts have proven
unsuccessful.
“The presence of eight different Christian alliances is not going to
benefit Christians in Iraq,” says Sarkoun Khoshaba, a Christian civil
society activist who lives in the northern province of Ninawa. “The
parties themselves are only acting in their own interests, so that they
can get one more of those five seats than the others.”
The parties do have different ideas about how to administrate
Christian-majority areas and how best to protect Christians in Iraq,
Khoshaba notes. But the biggest reason the divisions between the parties
have arisen is because some of them are closer to the parties run by
Iraq’s Kurdish politicians and others are closer to Sunni Muslim or
Shiite Muslim-majority parties, Khoshaba explains.
All of these want to get the Christian politicians onto their side, he suggests.
During the past decade, Christian church leaders have usually
abstained from supporting any particular party. But this election, the
head of Iraq's Chaldean Catholic Church and one of Iraq’s best known
Christian leaders, Louis Raphael Sako, has thrown his lot in with the
Chaldean alliance.
There have been a number of disputes between the different political
parties inside parliament over the past few years too. The last
parliament had the Rafidain coalition in the seats for Baghdad and
Kirkuk while the Chaldean Syriac Assyrian Popular Council had the two
seats for Dohuk and Ninawa. Another group called Warka had the seat for
Erbil. Sako has been involved in this, criticizing the head of the Warka
list and also implying that the Rafidain coalition had not managed to
fulfil promises it made. In return the church leader has come in for a drubbing from the political parties, who say he should not be getting involved in politics.
And other Christian politicians are, perhaps justifiably, upset about
Sako’s new support for the Chaldean alliance. They say it will start a
kind of sectarian conflict between Iraq’s three Christian sects: the
Chaldeans, Syriacs and Assyrians.
For example, the Rafidain coalition, led by one of the country’s
long-serving, prominent Christian MPs, Yonadam Kanna, has remained close
to the Shiite Muslim political parties. The Rafidain coalition believes
that their alliance with the more powerful Shiite parties means they
will be able to better represent their constituents’ interests by making
deals with the more powerful. If they want to pass laws in favour of
Iraq’s Christians, they won’t be able to do it by themselves, goes the
reasoning.
Meanwhile the Chaldean Syriac Assyrian Popular Council is much closer
to the Iraqi Kurdish and has often supported Iraqi Kurdish MPs in
parliament; the Council has particularly good relations with the Kurdish
Democratic Party, or KDP.
In June 2017, Christian parties and leaders held a conference to
discuss the future for the country’s Christians after the extremist
group known as the Islamic State had been pushed out. But the different
parties fell out over the fact that the attendees at the conference were
planning to call for the formation of an independent Iraqi-Christian
region in Ninawa, one of the areas where Iraq’s Christians have
traditionally lived. The Rafidain coalition and Sako both withdrew from
the conference.
Three months after the conference the country’s Kurds held their
ill-fated referendum on independence, in the face of much opposition,
including the Iraqi government’s. The political parties belonging to the
Chaldean Syriac Assyrian Popular Council declared their support of it
though.
“Two things really reinforced the conflicts between the Christian
forces in Iraq,” says Yacoub Korkise, a member of the Assyrian
Democratic Party. “The first was the boycott of the conference and the
second was the different ways in which parties reacted to the Kurdish
independence referendum.”
The changed map of Christian alliances also reflects reality on the
ground for the country’s Christians, many of whom have immigrated, or
who have suffered from prejudice and sectarianism as well as the reality
for those Christians who were displaced from the Ninawa area and who
have not yet returned, Korkise continues.
And there is a further complication for Christian politicians in
Iraq. For the first time in the modern history of Iraq, Christian
fighters formed their own militias after 2014, when they were faced with
the threat of the Islamic State group. One of these is the Babylon
Brigade, headed by Rayan al-Kildani, and it was created with the support
of the Shiite Muslim militias who are closer to Iran. Some would even
say it was formed specifically to compete with another Christian
militia, the Ninawa Plain Protection Units who are associated with the
Rafidain movement and its leader, Yonadam Kanna, and who are considered
closer to the Kurds in northern Iraq.
The relationship between the Babylon Brigades and the Ninawa Plain
Protection Units is not warm. In fact, it has deteriorated to armed
clashes more than once in 2017, most spectacularly during fighting in
the town of Qaraqosh in July 2017.