By Church Times
Abigail Frymann Rouch and Robert Ewan
An Archbishop in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul has ordered staff at the UN’s de-mining agency and the British security firm G4S to stop clearing the churches in his diocese which were damaged during the city’s occupation by IS, after accusations that workers at one site were carrying out “horrific acts” without regard for its sanctity.
An Archbishop in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul has ordered staff at the UN’s de-mining agency and the British security firm G4S to stop clearing the churches in his diocese which were damaged during the city’s occupation by IS, after accusations that workers at one site were carrying out “horrific acts” without regard for its sanctity.
The
Syriac Catholic archdiocese of Mosul said in a statement that a
delegation from a local human-rights group, Hammurabi, had visited
churches in west Mosul, and, at one, found “horrific acts committed by a
group claiming that they were clearing debris from the church and
de-mining it”. It continued: “Workers were carrying debris in an
arbitrary manner with utter disregard for the holy and religious
sanctity” of the site.
A statement from Hammurabi accused the
security operatives of committing “crimes no less grievous and insolent
than the crimes of Daesh” in clearing the site of explosives without the
Church’s authorisation.
When Hammurabi informed the Syrian
Catholic Archbishop Petrous Moshe of Mosul, he ordered that the work be
stopped immediately and any damage photographed. An official complaint
will be lodged with the governor of Nineveh and the organisations
carrying out the clearance, the statement said.
The mayor of
Mosul, Zuhair al-Araji, visited the Al-Tahira church site, and was
reported in the Iraqi press as saying that the equipment that the UN
Mine Action Service (UNMAS) had used was unsuitable, given the church’s
fragile structure.
Although G4S and UNMAS were not named by the
archdiocese and the charity, they responded with a joint statement
saying that they “take these allegations seriously, welcome further
investigation, and are continuing to support and work closely with the
government of Iraq on this matter”.
The two organisations that are
working with an Iraqi firm to clear explosives in Mosul said that they
had invited Hammurabi and officials from the diocese, as well as other
relevant Iraqi authorities, to meet “to carefully consider the facts
relative to their statements and hope they will offer to correct the
record when known”.
A Chaldean Catholic priest in Mosul who asked not to be named told the Church Times
that Archbishop Moshe had told him that the people carrying out the
digging disturbed graves and caused damage to the submerged ancient
church on which Al-Tahira is built. The Archbishop also expressed
concern to him that items such as crosses and manuscripts were
reportedly missing from the older church.
During the three-year
occupation of Mosul by IS, the four churches in the Al-Maidan district
were used for detentions and trials. The area was badly damaged in the
battle to wrest control of the area from IS.
UNMAS Iraq and G4S
say that, to date, their teams have removed from the site 53 suicide
belts, 74 munitions of various types, seven improvised explosive
devices, and assorted ammunition and materials such as home-made
explosives.
G4S provided the response: “Our teams have a strong
focus on not causing unnecessary further damage to buildings. There are,
however, occasions where obstructions have to be removed to allow
access for the armoured machinery that is needed to safely clear the
explosive remnants.
“Any valuables that were not taken by ISIL
during their occupation are logged and documented. We then attempt to
locate the owners and formally hand them back.
“We are keen to resume work as soon as possible.”
Any
removal of ancient artefacts remains a sensitive issue in Iraq since
the looting and destruction of many historic sites by IS, and the
looting of the country’s National Museum during the chaos of the 2003
US-led invasion. Many Iraqis still hold US forces responsible for
failing to safeguard the several thousand items that were stolen.