By World Watch Monitor
What Iraq’s Christians want from the West is to say the plain truth: that there is ethnic cleansing of Christians in the region and it is ongoing, Dr Tim Stanley told a meeting at the UK’s parliament last Tuesday, 9 July.
What Iraq’s Christians want from the West is to say the plain truth: that there is ethnic cleansing of Christians in the region and it is ongoing, Dr Tim Stanley told a meeting at the UK’s parliament last Tuesday, 9 July.
The historian and columnist, working for UK daily newspaper The Telegraph, just returned from a visit to Iraq’s Nineveh Plains.
“If we don’t say what is really happening in the region, which is ethnic cleansing
of both Christians and Yazidis, we allow Islamic State and other
perpetrators to get away with it,” Stanley told the audience at the
event, ‘The Global Persecution of Christian Minorities’, organised by
the Henry Jackson Society, a British foreign-policy think tank.
Since Islamic State was pushed out of the region, displaced Iraqis have slowly started to return to their communities but continue to live in fear
and they continue to be vulnerable. Pockets of IS fighters are still
active and the group has said it started the fires that in recent weeks torched hundreds of acres of land and crops, “owned by infidels”, in northern Iraq.
Meanwhile,
Iranian-backed militias have moved into areas previously under
IS-control, discouraging people to trade with Christians, Stanley said.
In January, a UN team started investigations in the country to collect evidence of genocide and war crimes committed
by Islamic State fighters, in order to take the perpetrators to court
in Iraq. The UN has been reluctant to recognise the violence against
Christians and Yazidis as genocide, despite pressure from civil society groups and some of its own member states such as the Netherlands.