By Catholic News Agency
Matt Hadro
Iraqi Christians must take an active role in the country’s future if they want a unified, multi-religious Iraq, the Archbishop of Erbil said during a discussion of the country’s future with a U.S. congressman.
Matt Hadro
Iraqi Christians must take an active role in the country’s future if they want a unified, multi-religious Iraq, the Archbishop of Erbil said during a discussion of the country’s future with a U.S. congressman.
Archbishop Bashar Warda of the Chaldean Catholic Archdiocese of Erbil
made the call as months of large-scale protests against Iraqi
government corruption and perceived Iranian influence continue in the
country—one protest last week in Baghdad was estimated to be around
200,000 strong.
Warda said on Tuesday that younger Iraqis are a major part of the anti-corruption protests.
“The corruption is at its high. There are no jobs, no security, the
future is not there,” Warda said in a meeting Jan. 28 with Rep. Jeff
Fortenberry (R-Neb.). CNA was granted exclusive access to the meeting,
held in Washington, D.C.
“So young people, they see that there is no light at the end of the
tunnel, so they said ‘okay, enough is enough, and we need reform,’” he
said.
The protesters, Warda told CNA on Thursday, “want a respectful
relationship with all the international community respecting the
sovereignty of Iraq in all its levels, political, social, religious,
everything.
“So the protests are, in a way, protesting for a better Iraq, not
just for one community in that sense,” he said, “a better Iraq which has
a place for everyone, respecting the diversity and the richness of the
Iraqi nation as such.”
The archbishop addressed the United Nations Security Council in
December, saying that the protests were a rejection of the post-2003
government, particularly its “sectarian-based constitution.”
Christians, he said, had been welcomed into the protests, a sign of
growing demand for a “genuine, multi-religious Iraq” built on a
constitution that did not reflect Sharia law, but respected religious
freedom.
Pope Francis met with Iraq’s president Barham Salih on Saturday to
discuss the need for stability in the country’s future, as well as the
importance of Christians to maintaining the “social fabric” of Iraq.
The Church, Warda said, supports this call for “change” and he
encouraged citizens, especially the youth of Iraq, to show solidarity
and push for a unified Iraq where Christians can enjoy equal rights and
dignity.
The archbishop this week also reiterated his call for early
elections, a request that has been echoed by Iraq’s president and other
political leaders.
“It reflects the needs and the demands of the young people, everyone,
to make an actual change and to fight and to make the needed reform, to
fight corruption, to provide jobs and better life,” Warda told CNA on
Thursday.
The delay in nominating a prime minister reveals a “blocked road,” he
said.“You need an early election to bring new faces new blood, to the
political process.”
Another critical development, he said, must be the integration of
Christians and other ethnic and religious minorities into the national
security and police forces.
In the wake of the ISIS genocide, security for displaced Christians
returning to their homes in Northern Iraq has been a primary concern.
Christians in the area have reported harassment and violence at the
hands of local militia groups. There have been allegations of Iranian
influence of these militias to gain influence in the area through proxy
conflicts.
If the local towns are policed by local residents, it would do much
to re-establish order in the region once ravaged by ISIS and sectarian
conflict, Archbishop Warda said.
“It’s important to integrate all the people of Iraq into the army,
into the police force, train them, especially in areas like the Nineveh
Plain where they have so many young people ready and willing to protect
and defend their villages,” he said.
“That’s a right. That’s a right, and a request. We’ve been requesting this, as Church leaders.”
During the Tuesday meeting, Rep. Fortenberry said that such
integration “would help rid the country of the shadowy militia
quasi-military movement that is causing such instability.”
Fortenberry successfully worked to include language in a budget bill
passed by Congress last year, that the Secretary of State work with the
Iraqi government to make sure that security forces “reflect the
ethno-sectarian makeup of the areas in which they operate by integrating
local populations into such forces.”
USAID has also been working to ensure U.S. humanitarian assistance
reaches ISIS genocide victims in Iraq, telling CNA last summer that
around $367 million had been provided by the agency and the State
Department under Vice President Mike Pence’s initiative.
In September, USAID awarded $6.8 million to Catholic Relief Services,
which partnered with the Archdiocese of Erbil to provide housing
assistance for displaced families.
“In some ways, it’s turning an aircraft carrier around in a canal,”
USAID administrator Mark Green told CNA last summer of the process of
helping the genocide victims rebuild.
This week, Archbishop Warda said that the USAID money was starting to make a difference in the region.