Showing posts with label genocide. Show all posts
Showing posts with label genocide. Show all posts

Friday, December 11, 2015

For Persecuted Mideast Christians, Obama Admin Tongue-Tied on Genocide - By JNS BIN

For Persecuted Mideast Christians, Obama Admin Tongue-Tied on Genocide

By Shalle’ McDonald
While Christians in Iraq and Syria face the threat of extinction at the hands of the Islamic State terror group, the U.S. State Department remains silent on the prospect of publicly designating the atrocities against Christians and other Mideast religious minorities as “genocide.”
According to a recent investigative piece by journalist Michael Isikoff for Yahoo! News, the State Department is in the midst of internal discussions to officially recognize the Yazidi people as genocide victims. But a lingering question remains: Will other religious minorities be included in the Obama administration’s designation?
“Scholars and experts are in consensus regarding the term ‘genocide’ being applied to both Christians and Yazidis alike…We need to ensure that all groups being persecuted by Islamic extremism are being treated equally under Article 2 of the United Nations’ Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide,” Mark Arabo, an American spokesman for the Middle East’s Chaldean Catholic community and a human rights activist, told JNS.org.
In particular, human rights activists argue that Christians and other religious minorities should definitely be included in a genocide designation due to the ongoing systematic murder, rape, enslavement, forced conversion, and displacement of their communities in Iraq and Syria.
Villages that have had Christian presence for centuries have virtually become ghost towns as a majority of Mideast Christians have been forced to flee, convert, or be murdered. Even Christian families who chose the option of paying the jizya—an Islamic tax on non-Muslims—had to hand their wives over to the Islamic State terrorists.
Charles Hayes, an expert on religious freedom and vice president of the Newseum Institute in Washington, DC, told JNS.org that the designation of genocide for Christians is “long overdue.”
“If the State Department issues a genocide designation for Yazidis, that would be a step forward—but it is not enough. Invoking genocide is a serious action and should only be done when conditions are most dire. That’s where we are now in Iraq and Syria. It is time to call what is happening to Yazidis, Christians, and others what it is: genocide,” Hayes said.
David Brog, a board member of Christians United for Israel, called the persecution of Mideast Christians “the great human rights tragedy of our time.”
“This [Obama] administration has a disturbing record of downplaying and even ignoring this tragedy. This is just one more sign that the administration is deaf to the cries of our Christian brethren,” Brog told JNS.org.
The State Department’s reluctance to label Islamic State atrocities against Mideast Christians as genocide is evident by the department’s own statements.
A State Department source told JNS.org—without specifically mentioning Christians—that alongside the atrocities against the Yazidi people, Islamic State has victimized a “wide range” of communities in Iraq and Syria, but that the Syrian regime of President Bashar al-Assad regime is the actor most responsible for the mass murders of civilians in the region.
Obama administration officials told Yahoo! News that Islamic State attacks against Christians and other Middle East religious minorities may not warrant the genocide label because Islamic State may not have the intention to actually eradicate those minority populations. Asked specifically whether Christians and other religious minorities will be included in the genocide designation, a State Department official said, “At this time we ourselves have not made a formal finding of genocide. We are not going to comment on internal discussions.”
An Obama administration official further told JNS.org, “Our policy and objective is to degrade and defeat ISIL (Islamic State) and hold perpetrators accountable. The protection of members of groups under attack and the provision of humanitarian assistance to members of displaced groups are vitally important and will continue to be a key priority for the U.S. government. To that end, we will continue to support the victims of these atrocities, work with responsible governments and other international partners to hold those responsible for these crimes fully accountable, and strive to prevent the commission of such atrocities in the future.”
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Yet Ambassador Anne Patterson, assistant secretary of the State Department’s Near East Bureau, hinted at a House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee hearing last month that a genocide designation might be in the works. Asked by U.S. Rep. Jeff Fortenberry (R-Neb.) whether Islamic State’s atrocities are considered genocide, Patterson said she could not say yes or no, but that she believes “there will be some announcements on that very shortly.”
Earlier this year, Fortenberry introduced a bipartisan resolution denouncing the genocide against Christians as well as other ethnic and religious minorities in Iraq and Syria.
“The international community must confront the scandalous silence about their plight. Christians, Yazidis, and other religious minorities have every right to remain in their ancestral homelands,” the resolution stated.
Pressure on the Obama administration to publicly use the genocide label is mounting, coming from various spheres of influence. Scholars, religious leaders, and NGOs represented by the International Religious Freedom Roundtable recently sent a letter to President Barack Obama urging his administration to “formally declare the systematic destruction of these ancient communities a genocide.”
This past March, the U.N. human rights office strongly suggested that Islamic State may be committing genocide. Yet Adama Dieng, the U.N.’s special advisor on the prevention of genocide, conveyed that it is not a simple move to make the designation.
“Only a judicial body with an appropriate mandate can make a legal determination,” Dieng said in a statement.
Dieng warned that “the international community cannot afford to wait until such a determination is made. We must take action to protect populations earlier, before situations deteriorate to the point where the window of opportunity closes and the options for action are fewer and more costly.”
Brett McGurk, America’s special presidential envoy to the Global Coalition To Counter ISIL, recently told reporters, “We’re going to destroy this terrorist organization, and in two ways: We’re going to suffocate the core, which is in Iraq and Syria; and we’re going to suffocate the global networks.”
The 65-member coalition’s plan is “taking back major ground and territory, of finding out about the financial networks, the economic structures, how they’re actually financing themselves, and then trying to root that out,” said McGurk.
Yet apart from America’s military goals for dealing with Islamic State, the Obama administration’s humanitarian efforts to prevent genocide remain a mystery. Last year, Obama stated in reference to the Yazidis that “the United States of America cannot turn a blind eye. We can act, carefully and responsibly, to prevent a potential act of genocide.”
Arabo—who lobbies on behalf of Chaldeans from the Middle East, particularly from Iraq, who are seeking asylum in the U.S.—believes that indeed, genocide is exactly what is being committed against Christians in the Middle East.
“We need to be upfront and honest when dealing with the culture of intolerance and persecution against religious minorities like Christians. We cannot turn a blind eye to the reality of death and genocide occurring against the Middle East Christian minorities,” Arabo told JNS.org.
Without the genocide designation, added Arabo, “We would be facing the end of Christianity in the Middle East. There is little hope, there is little chance, and there are no longer any viable options. The cradle with which Christianity was born will forever be altered by the evil that is ISIS.”

Thursday, December 10, 2015

Christian Leaders Pushing Obama to Tell the Truth About ISIS - CBN

A member of the peshmerga forces inspects a tunnel used by Islamic State militants in the town of Sinjar, Iraq.
A member of the peshmerga forces inspects a tunnel used by Islamic State militants in the town of Sinjar, Iraq. (Reuters)

Christian Leaders Pushing Obama to Tell the Truth About ISIS
12/10/2015 CBN
A member of the peshmerga forces inspects a tunnel used by Islamic State militants in the town of Sinjar, Iraq. (Reuters)

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Christian leaders are pushing the Obama administration to declare that ISIS is committing genocide against Christians, Politico reports.
The term "genocide" has specific legal and political implications.
Under international treaties, the United States may have a legal obligation to act if the State Department declares that Christians are victims of genocide.
That declaration would pressure the White House to provide protection to Iraqi and Syrian Christians.
Many in Congress would likely support the idea.
This week, lawmakers gathered on Capitol Hill to talk about Christian persecution in the Middle East.
Rep. Chris Smith, R-N.J., who chairs the House Subcommittee on Global Human Rights, says the Obama administration should label the enslavement, torture and execution of Christians by Islamic State as genocide.
"The world is experiencing a crisis of religious freedom that poses a direct challenge to U.S. interests in the Middle East, Central and East Asia, Russia, China and sub-Saharan Africa," Smith wrote in an op-ed posted on The Hill.
"Diplomacy by itself will not stop terrorism, but coordinated with military and economic development efforts, it can help undermine the conditions that nurture groups such as ISIS and Boko Haram as well as extremist Hinduism or radical Buddhism," he wrote.
Groups assisting refuges say Christians who flee ISIS often face persecution and religious violence in U.N. refugee camps.
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Monday, September 7, 2015

Christians Facing Genocide Need Your Help Now - Chris Mitchell

Christians Facing Genocide Need Your Help Now

JERUSALEM, Israel -- More than 100,000 Christians have escaped ISIS terrorists over the past year. Most are still scattered across the Middle East.
Finally, one proposal might offer them a way out of their heart-wrenching dilemma.
Christians in the Middle East face the worst situation in centuries. Human rights observers say the West must pay attention to their plight.
Nina Shea, director of the Center for Religious Freedom at the Hudson Institute, says the world cannot in good conscience ignore them.
"They need to know that Christians are facing genocide," Shea told CBN News. "They need to help these Christians. They need to help them with their prayer and with aid to them to leave."  
After ISIS conquered Mosul and large swathes of territory in Iraq more than a year ago, thousands of Christians found refuge in Kurdistan, others in Jordan and Lebanon. They can't go back home and they can't find work to support themselves and their families.
"ISIS stripped them of all their property," she explained. "When they went into exile, they went into safe havens that will not give them residency status, that will not give them worker authorizations. So they have no money. So it's a very bleak picture."
Shea hopes teaming up with Hollywood producer Mark Burnett will make a difference.
"We've decided that for the most-needy cases, they need to leave; they need to start their lives over," Shea explained. "They need to be re-settled in countries that would give them work authorization, that would allow them to rebuild their lives."
The center plans to resettle these Christians in comfortable surroundings.
"For the Armenians, Armenia; they're Christian of course. (For) Orthodox communities we're looking at Orthodox countries, maybe Georgia, maybe Russia, maybe some places in Eastern Europe. For Protestants we're looking at the Western countries," she explained.
While the numbers are staggering, Shea adds that Christians face an even greater danger.
"Now, the difference with Christians is that they -- underneath the conflict, they're not just running from a conflict. They're running from targeted persecution against them," she said.
Shea calls on the Church not only to pray, but to get involved.
"The Church of the West and the free world, Latin America, needs to pray all the time, I mean, not just once a year, but pray every Sunday in congregation for these persecuted Christians," she said. "And if they can, [they should] contact their political representatives and the candidates running for office to say the United States should take its share of Christians as well."
Find out how to help these Christian refugees 
at the Center for Religious Freedom.