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Oct 13 2008
Christian shot dead in Mosul | Print |  E-mail
Arab World
By Agencies   

Nearly 1,000 families were reported to have fled Mosul over the past week [AFP]
Nearly 1,000 families were reported to have fled Mosul over the past week [AFP]
A Christian businessman has been shot dead by a group of unidentified armed men in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul, police sources say.

The latest in a series of attacks, the shooting came before a local official said that the flight of Christian families from the city had been stemmed by an increased police presence.

Jaweat Ismael, chief of the city's bureau of displaced people, said there was "no new wave of displacements" on Monday after nearly 1,000 families had left their homes during the previous week.

A correspondent for the AFP news agency said that police were manning checkpoints as well as patrolling churches and residential neighbourhoods across Mosul.

Dr Ali al-Dabbagh, the spokesperson for the Iraqi government, said on Monday that an investigation into the situation would be launched by a committee including members of the interior and defence ministries.

He said that anti-government groups were working with criminal gangs to target the Christian community.

The government will send additional Iraqi forces to the area to assure "the Christians of the government's commitment to their security and protection," al-Dabbagh said.

In the latest attack, which took place in the eastren part of the city late on Sunday, the armed men stormed into the businessman's shop killing him and wounding his nephew.

At least 12 Christians have been killed since September 28.

The Christian community has been estimated at three per cent of Iraq's 26 million people, or about 800,000 Christians, and has a significant presence in the northern Nineveh.

Christian protests

In recent weeks, hundreds of Christians have taken to the streets in Baghdad and Mosul to protest against a provincial election law which deprives them of small quotas of seats in Nineveh, Baghdad and other provinces.

The government has asked parliament to restore the quotas.

Meanwhile, the US military said it has detained six suspected anti-government fighters in the city.

"One of the wanted men is believed to be in contact with a foreign terrorist responsible for carrying out attacks against Iraqi and coalition forces," the US military said in a statement.

At least seven people were killed and dozens wounded on Sunday in three separate attacks, including two suicide car bombings, aimed at US and Iraqi soldiers.

The violence in Mosul has occurred despite US-Iraqi operations launched over the summer aimed at routing al-Qaeda in Iraq and other fighters from remaining strongholds north of the capital.


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