Iraq: Christians Targeted in Mosul

Iraq: Christians Targeted in Mosul

By Vivek Thiagarajan
Impunity Watch Senior Desk Officer, Middle East

MOSUL, Iraq- On Sunday, three bombs simultaneously went off targeting two Christian churches and a convent.  The three bombs went off between 11 and 11:30 am injuring four people.  The bombs were possibly coordinated to instill greater fear in Iraqi Christians and to remind them that they are not immune to the violence occurring between the Shiite and Sunni Muslims.

Iraqi Prime Minister Al-Maliki met with Monsignor Francis Assisi Chullikatt, the Vatican’s Ambassador, to reassure him that the Iraqi government is taking every step possible to ensure the safety of Christians.  “The Iraqi government is anxious to ensure the safety of Iraqi Christians,” Maliki assured the ambassador.  (AFP)

Since 2004, Iraqi Christians believed report that they have been targeted solely because of their religious affiliation.  Father Rayan Atto, a Chaldean pastor of an Erbil church, discussed the fate of his fellow Christians. “We have many, many young people — they were killed for any excuse. They were just killed because they were Christians.” (Pittsburgh Tribune- Review)

Some Christians have been kidnapped and forced to convert to Islam.   Faris Mansour Hanna discussed his experience when he was kidnapped by Al-Qaeda operatives.  “They said, ‘We will release you, but we have one condition. You have to convert to Islam.’” However, since Hanna refused to convert “they beat my face and burned me with cigarettes.”  He went on to show the reporter conducting the interview his scars on his arm, hand, left cheek and forehead and significant scarring on his shoulders “from being dragged in the street, whipped and beaten with a metal pipe.”  However, his fellow kidnapped Christians were not released but were beheaded because the Christians had reportedly worked as translators for the Americans.  (Pittsburgh Tribune-Review)

For more information, please see:

AFP- Iraq working to ensure safety of Christians: Maliki- 8 January 2008

AP- Bomber Kills 11 at Iraqi Army Festival- 7 January 2008

BBC News- Christian sites targeted in Mosul- 7 January 2008

Pittsburgh Tribune-Review- No peace for Iraqi Christians- 23 December 2007

Peace Talks Commence in DRC

By Meryl White
Impunity Watch Reporter, Western and Central Africa

NORTH KIVU, Democratic Republic of Congo –  In the eastern part of the Democratic Republic of Congo, Rebel delegates under the leadership of General Nkunda have arrived to attend peace talks between government and rebel actors. General Nkunda will not attend the nine day conference.

The fighting between rebel forces and the Congolese army has lead to the displacement of more than 800,000 civilians in the North Kivu province. More than 10,000 people live in the Buhimba refugee camp alone. People are suffering from sanitation, hygiene and health problems because they are living so close together. 

General Nkunda claims that his forces protect ethnic Tutsie in the Northern Kivu province from Hutus who drove them out of Rwanda in the 1994 genocide.

Presently, the rebels want the government to deal with Rwandan Hutu rebels, who have not been invited to attend the peace conference. All Africa.com has stated that the “Tutsi led rebels’ demands are not clearly defined.”

During the opening ceremony, more than 600 delegates from opposing parties were in attendance. Moreover, in the next few days, twenty government ministers will attend the conference. Congo’s Interior Minister Denis Kalume urged all rebels to disarm. Nevertheless, some members of President Joseph Kabila’s government in Kinshasa were reluctant to end the conflict, rejecting General Nkunda’s call for peace talks.

For more information, please see:

BBC – Rebels Attend Congo Peace Talks – 7 January 2008

VOA- Fleeing Civilians Swell Displacement Camps in Eastern DRC –   7 January 2008

All Africa – Congo-Kinshasa: Peace Conference Opens in Violence-Torn East  – 7 January 2008

Zuma Charged with Corruption

By Myriam Clerge
Impunity Watch Reporter, Eastern and Southern Africa

JOHANNESBURG, South Africa – South Africa starts the New Year off to a rough patch as newly elected African National Congress (ANC) leader, Jacob Zuma, is charged with corruption. Zuma has maintained his innocence since talks began that the prosecution had enough evidence to reinstate the corruption charges, in connection with an arms deal dating about a decade ago. Zuma faces charges of corruption, fraud, money laundering and racketeering, and will stand trial in August.

The fight for the ANC leadership was fierce and bitter as Zuma, who served as Deputy President under Thabo Mbeki, went head to head with his former boss, a veteran of the fight against apartheid. In the end, Zuma came out victorious beating Mbeki with more than 800 votes.

Taking into consideration Kenya’s reaction to the 27 December presidential election that has left more than 300 dead, Zuma has urged his supporters, angered by the corruption charges, to refrain from any violence. Zuma was quoted as saying, there should not be “any violence or burning of property, or anything like that… there are other ways, legal ways, with which to deal with such matters.”

The announcement that Zuma would be charged for corruption has withered the already fragile truce, between himself and Mbeki. Zuma insisted that he will only relinquish his post if he is found guilty in court. Given the ANC’s massive electoral majority and the end of Mbeki’s term in 2009, Zuma is expected to sail into the South African President seat.

However, if Zuma is ultimately convicted, Kgalema Motlanthe will take the position as the ANC’s new deputy leader, thus making him the frontrunner to succeed Thabo Mbeki as South African president in 2009. Zuma’s supporters, which include the Congress of South African Trade Unions, believe that the charges are politically motivated in a ruthless campaign by opponents designed to ruin him.

For more information please see:

BBC – South Africa Faces Turbulent 2008 – 7 January 2008

Yahoo News – South Africa’s ruling party begins meeting on Zuma’s graft charge -7 January 2008

Yahoo News – South Africa’s ANC to discuss Zuma graft case – 6 January 2008

Tamil Tiger Intelligence Chief Killed

By Juliana Chan
Impunity Watch Reporter, Asia

COLOMBO, Sri Lanka – The Tamil Tigers’ intelligence chief was among the 34 rebels killed in northern Sri Lanka on Saturday. The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) said they lost the head of an intelligence unit, Shanmuganathan Ravishankar, when a military unit infiltrated rebel territory and planted a roadside bomb.

Sri Lankan officials have denied carrying out attacks inside Tiger territory.

The intelligence chief’s death comes just days after President Mahinda Rajapaksa’s government announced that it was formally canceling a 2002 truce agreement made with the LTTE. Analysts expect this to lead to intensified fighting between the two sides. There has already been increased exchanges of fire in the region since the truce was canceled.

The Tamils have been fighting since 1972 for an independent homeland in Sri Lanka’s north and east.

According to government figures, 74 rebels and three soldiers have been killed in fighting since the beginning of the year, while tens of thousands of people have died since the conflict erupted in 1972.

For more information, please see:

The New York Times (Reuters) – Sri Lanka Says Kills Tiger Intelligence Head – 6 January 2008

Bloomberg – Sri Lankan Army Advances in Jaffna After Rebel Commander Killed– 7 January 2008

BBC – Tamil intelligence chief killed – 6 January 2008

BRIEF: Charles Taylor Trial Begins

THE HAGUE, NetherlandsCharles Taylor, the former president of Liberia, is on trial again today after a six-month delay.  Taylor is accused of controlling militia that killed and raped thousands in Sierra Leone.  Taylor is the first ex-African head of state to face a trial before an international war crimes tribunal. 

Video of mutliated Sierra Leonean victims was shown today and the first witness gave testimony regarding conflict diamonds.  The expert, Ian Smillie, testified as to the key role diamonds play in funding conflicts in countries that lack hard currency. 

Taylor is accused of arming, training, and controlling the notorious Revolutionary United Front (RUF) rebels in exchange for an unknown amount of diamonds.  The conflict in Sierra Leone resulted in the death of 120,000 and the mutilation of thousands. 

Taylor’s trial before the Special Court for Sierra Leone was moved to The Hague from Freetown due to fears over security and the threat of destabilization.  The trial opened in June, but was initially boycotted by Taylor, and was postponed after Taylor fired his first lawyer.  In August Taylor accepted a new lawyer and received a $100,000 a month defense budget, with the trial being postponed to give the new defense team time to prepare. 

For more information, please see:

BBC News – Shocking footage at Taylor trial – 7 January 2008

AFP – War crimes trial of Liberian ex-president Taylor resumes – 7 January 2008

Guardian Unlimited (UK) – Taylor war crimes trial begins – 7 January 2008