(AP) |
The Ninewa Plains are dotted with several Christian towns. They all suffered during the war against the Islamic State with most of the populations fleeing. Since the conflict ended, many of these areas have continued to face problems with getting people to return, rebuilding and rivalries with other communities.
Qaraqosh is one of the main Christian towns found in eastern
Ninewa. It
was occupied by the Islamic State from August 2014 to October 2016 during
which the entire population left. It was
liberated by the Iraqi Security Forces (ISF) and the Christian Ninewa
Plains Protection Units, which received training from the Americans, and is
affiliated with the Assyrian Democratic Movement. Shortly afterwards the
Babylon Brigades set up outside of the town. The Babylon Brigades is made up of
Shabaks and Shiite Arabs, worked under the Hashd, and is
close to the Badr Organization and Asaib Ahl Al-Haq. That led to a conflict
between the two.
In the summer of 2017 the groups clashed. It started when
the Ninewa Protection Unit arrested members of the Babylon Brigades for looting.
The Brigade raided the Ninewa Protection Unit’s offices in revenge. Bishop
Boutrous Mushi called Prime Minister Haidar Abadi to intervene to stop things
from escalating. That led the Babylon Brigades being ordered
to leave the town by the government, which it did. The war against the
Islamic State led to a proliferation of armed groups connected to all different
parties both inside and out of Iraq. Many are competing with each other for
power and influence, which leads to incidents like that which occurred in Qaraqosh.
Reconstruction is another issue. After Qaraqosh was
liberated it was looted and homes were burned by the Iraqi forces. Ironically,
the Ninewa Protection Units might have been involved. In rural areas like the
Ninewa Plains the government has largely been absent. That has left the church
and non-governmental organizations to the task of doing much of the rebuilding.
The church for example, set up a committee to go through Qaraqosh to see what
it needed, and NGOs and charities have used that data. At the same time, the
war and the slow pace of reconstruction has led only half the population to
return to the town.
Bartella,
which is just east of Mosul, is facing a similar situation. When the Islamic
State took over in 2014 all the inhabitants fled. Since then only around
one-third of the Christian families have moved back, while almost all the
Shabaks have. One reason is because there is tensions between the two
communities. A Catholic priest told the Associated Press that many Christians
felt that the Shabaks were pushing them out of the town. Shabak Hashd also
control security in most of Bartella along with the Ninewa Protection Units. Just
like in Qaraqosh the recent war has led to new differences between Christians
and Shabaks. This has been made worse because each side now has its own
militia. The Shabaks want a new status quo. Christians see that as a threat especially
because their population continues to decline. These are just some of the
social fissures that have emerged in Iraq in the aftermath of the war.
SOURCES
Abuelgasim, Fay,
“Iraqi Christians fear returning home, wary of Shiite militia,” Associated
Press, 2/10/19
Al Ghad Press, “The
50th Brigade clarifies the crisis between the Ninewa Plans and
Assyrian forces,” 7/16/17
Habib, Mustafa,
“Frenemies United: Security Problems, Scrappy Militias Delay Fight Against
Extremists In Western Mosul,” Niqash, 2/1/17
Human Rights Watch,
“Iraq: Looting, Destruction by Forces Fighting ISIS,” 2/16/17
Iraq Newspaper,
“Iraqi Newspaper Reporter: Fierce Battles Between Armed Christian Factions In
The Ninewa Plain,” 7/15/17
- “Iraqi Newspaper
Reporter In Mosul: The Expulsion Of The Babylon Brigades From Mosul Over
Stealing Antiquities,” 7/16/17
Knights, Michael and
Kailan, Yousif, “Confidence- and Security-Building Measures in the Nineveh
Plains,” Washington Institute for Near East Policy,” 7/14/17
Oader, Histyar,
“Iraq’s Christian Militias Not United Against Extremists, Politics Fueling
Differences,” Niqash, 9/23/15
Salloum, Saad,
“Armed disputes reveal Iraqi Christians’ discord,” Al Monitor, 8/15/17
Skelton, Mac and Bahnam, Karam, “The Bishop and the Prime Minister:
Mediating Conflict in the Nineveh Pains,” Middle East Centre Blog, The London
School of Economics and Political Science, 1/25/19
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