By World Watch Monitor
The Islamic State’s three-year occupation of the northern Iraqi city of Mosul and its surrounding villages ended nearly two years ago, yet the city and its diminished number of Christian residents remain vulnerable.
The Islamic State’s three-year occupation of the northern Iraqi city of Mosul and its surrounding villages ended nearly two years ago, yet the city and its diminished number of Christian residents remain vulnerable.
Last month the Iraqi government announced it
 would arm residents of 50 villages around Mosul, Iraq’s second-largest 
city, so they could protect themselves against pockets of IS fighters 
that continue to be active in the country.  
They appear to have adopted a ‘hit-and-run’ approach, attacking local targets like a market in Kirkuk,
 184km southeast of Mosul, with the aim to undermine the government in 
Baghdad. IS has also claimed responsibility for some of the fires that 
in recent weeks torched hundreds of acres of land in northern Iraq, destroying crops on land that the attackers say is “owned by infidels”. 
In
 addition, sectarian tensions that predate the IS occupation have raised
 their heads again. Iranian-backed militias, known as Popular 
Mobilization Forces, patrol the streets and sometimes control whole 
towns, as reported by the National Catholic Register. 
Constant fear
It is this lack of security and stability makes Christians hesitate to return to their homes and communities.
 Since the toppling of Saddam Hussein in 2003, the number of Christians 
in Iraq, — between 1.4 million and 2 million — has decreased. Precise 
numbers are hard to come by, but estimates of the Christians left in 
Iraq range from 200,000 to 250,000.   
“Christianity
 in Iraq, one of the oldest Churches, if not the oldest Church in the 
world, is perilously close to extinction,” the Rt. Rev. Bashar Warda, 
Archbishop of Erbil, told Christian leaders during
 a visit to the United Kingdom last month.  After 1,400 years of 
persecution, Iraq’s Christians may have come to the end of the road, he 
said. 
Christians who decide to return face many challenges.
 Houses and infrastructure have been destroyed and there is the constant
 fear of possible attacks from the IS cells or sectarian militias.  
Salim Harihosan, a Christian resident, told AP he regretted coming back to his hometown, Bartella,
 23km east of Mosul. Although his house has been rebuilt with the help 
of an NGO, he feels unsafe. “It is a psychological situation… I go to 
the market and I hear things, that maybe this or that happened”, he 
said. “These things play with the mind of the person living here”. 
Once
 a predominantly Syriac Christian town before the IS 
occupation, Bartella now is majority Shiite Muslim and is controlled by a
 militia dominated by the ethnic Shabak. Citizens have reported 
incidents of harassment and intimidation. 
The Shabak representative
 in parliament in Baghdad, Qusay Abbas, told AP that these were 
“individual incidents” and did not represent the position of the group 
towards the Christians.  
Ensuring equal rights
Iqbal
 Shino, a Christian woman who returned to Bartella in 2017, told the 
news agency she was sexually harassed by a Shabak member. She initially 
filed a complaint with the police but later withdrew it for fear 
of retribution.   
Christian charities Open Doors, Served and Middle East Concern have advocated for an “accountability mechanism” to
 deal with incidents of religious and ethnic persecution and 
discrimination in Iraq and Syria, to ensure the future safety and 
security of Christians in the region. The countries are 13th and 11th , respectively, on the Open Doors’ 2019 World Watch List of nations where it is most difficult to live as a Christian.
A new
 legal center is trying to educate the Christian minority in the Nineveh
 region about their rights. A four-person legal team, including a judge 
and a lawyer, work on registering and advocating for cases in which land
 and homes of Christians are repossessed, where they are denied access 
to public services like education, and in which women are denied rights.
“We see this initiative in Iraq as one of the most important projects
 to ensure the equal rights of Christians in Iraq”, an Open 
Doors spokesperson said. “We invest in it because we believe in the 
importance of raising the local capacity of local Christians to defend 
their rights. It is also crucial that we don’t only help in rebuilding 
Christian towns and villages, but more importantly help secure a legal 
framework in which their rights and future are protected”. 
Other
 efforts to restore a sense of normalcy are less formal. In Mosul, youth
 from the Christian, Yazidi and Shabak communities in the Nineveh Plain 
region handed out white roses and sweets to Muslims on 5 
June during Eid-al Fitr, the celebration that closes the fasting season 
of Ramadan. The Catholic news agency Fides reported
 that the gesture, organized by Italian association “Un Ponte per …”,  was meant as a small taste of a future where “every person can 
follow their own religious beliefs and express it freely, with respect 
and friendship, sharing traditions and happy moments”