اجراءات امنية مشددة لحماية تسع كنائس في كركوك

قال مدير شرطة بلدة كركوك، ان الاجهزة الامنية فرضت اجراءات امنية مشددة على تسع كنائس في المدينة، عقب التفجيرات...
13 يناير 2008 - 02:00 بتوقيت القدس

قال مدير شرطة بلدة كركوك، ان الاجهزة الامنية فرضت اجراءات امنية مشددة على تسع كنائس في المدينة، عقب التفجيرات التي طالت كنيسة مار أفرام للسريان الارذوكس وكاتدرائية قلب يسوع للكلدان وسط كركوك.
واضاف العميد برهان عبد الله طيب، للوكالة المستقلة للانباء (اصوات العراق) أن "شرطة محافظة كركوك، فرضت اجراءات امنية مشددة حول الكنائس في المدينة، على خلفية التفجيرات التي طالت عصر اليوم (الاربعاء) كنيسة مار أفرام للسريان الارذوكس وكاتدرائية قلب يسوع للكلدان في كركوك."

واوضح العميد طيب ان "عدد الكنائس المشمولة بالاجراءت الامنية هي تسع كنائس تمثل عدد الكنائس الموجودة في كركوك." مبينا ان "الانباء التي تحدثت عن سقوط ضحايا في تفجيرات اليوم غير دقيقة، ولم تسجل خسائر بشرية في اي من مستشفيات المدينة."

يذكر ان مصدرا في شرطة كركوك قال لـ(اصوات العراق) في وقت سابق، إن سيارة مفخخة انفجرت عصر الاربعاء مستهدفة كنيسة مار أفرام للسريان الارذوكس في ساحة العمال وسط كركوك، فيما انفجرت سيارة ثانية بعدها بوقت قليل في منطقة ساحة الطيران وسط كركوك مستهدفة كاتدرائية قلب يسوع للكلدان.

واضاف المصدر ان الانفجارين نتج عنهما الحاق اضرار بالاسوار الخارجية للكنيسة. دون وقوع خسائر بشرية.
ويأتي الهجوم بعد ثلاثة ايام من موجة تفجيرات استهدفت سبعة اديرة وكنائس في الموصل وبغداد اسفرت عن جرح عدد من المدنيين والحاق اضرار مادية بالكنائس والاديرة المستهدفة عشية احتفال الطوائف المسيحية الشرقية في السابع من كانون الثاني يناير بعيد الميلاد حسب التقويم الميلادي الغريغوري.

وتوجد في العراق أربع طوائف مسيحية رئيسة وهي الكلدانية ( أتباع الكنيسة الشرقية المتحولين إلى الكثلكة) والسريانية الأرذثوكسية، والسريانية الكاثوليكية والآشورية (أتباع الكنيسة الشرقية – النسطورية سابقا)، إضافة إلى أعداد قليلة من أتباع كنائس الأرمن والروم والأقباط والبروتستانت.
اصوات العراق

شارك المقالة:
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التعليق على مسؤولية المعلق فقط وهو ليس بالضرورة رأي الموقع
1. نبيل 14 يناير 2008 - 00:00 بتوقيت القدس
حصيلة التفجيرات ضد كنائس العراق من زمن الاحتلال حصيلة التفجيرات ضد كنائس العراق من زمن الاحتلال
Brussels -- Reports have confirmed that on Sunday 6th of January seven churches and monasteries in Iraq were bombed. There are reports that the targets were three Christian churches and three convents belonging to religious orders. Furthermore, it has been reported that four of the churches bombed were located in the city of Mosul, capital of the Nineveh province. Ninos Warda, ACE Project Director states that: "The Assyrian community in Europe is shocked and appalled by the recent church bombings in Iraq but unfortunately this is not the first time that churches in Iraq have been targeted and if something is not done in the immediate future it may not be the last time either. It is clear that the aim of such attacks is to intimidate and undermine the Assyrian Christian community in Iraq so as to lead to a mass exodus from their ancestral lands. This is affirmed in the recent European Parliament resolution of 15th November 2007 on Christian Communities whereby the Parliament admitted of the fact that to take just one example, in recent years hundreds of Assyrian Christian families from Dora, a neighbourhood in Baghdad, have left the city as a result of intimidation, threats and violence. Such a status quo cannot be maintained and the Assyria Council of Europe has made some recommendations as to what steps the EU can and should take to alleviate the situation in Iraq." The Assyria Council of Europe strongly condemns these recent church bombings and calls upon the European Union to act immediately by: Issuing a joint declaration signed by the European Commission, Council of the European Union and the European Parliament strongly and vehemently condemning these recent church bombings and urging the government of Iraq to take adequate and immediate measures to protect the dwindling Assyrian Christian community in Iraq by preventing such events from recurring. Setting up a delegation or commission whose role is purely to promote inter-faith dialogue within Iraq so that through dialogue and understanding such atrocious events can be prevented in the future. Following the example set by five members of the Dutch Parliament who addressed pertinent and important questions regarding this issue to the Dutch Minister of Foreign Affairs, Maxime Verhagen, urging all national parliaments within the European Union to take similar action so that awareness of this recent tragedy can be increased and tangible action can be taken to remedy its unfortunate affects to the Iraqi community as a whole. Church Bombings in Iraq Since 2004 Posted GMT 1-7-2008 (AINA) -- 40 Assyrian churches have been bombed in Iraq since June 26, 2004. The following lists the bombings: January 9, 2008: 2 churches bombed. Two churches were bombed in central and northern Kirkuk; three people were wounded. January 6, 2008: 7 churches bombed. In Mosul: Chaldean Church of Saint paul Nunnery of Dominican Sisters Orphanage of the Chaldean Sisters In Baghdad: Rum Orthodox Church (where the guard was injured) Mar Ghorghis chaldean church in Ghadir area Saint Paul Chaldean church in Zafaraniya area where, according to Mgr. Warduni, the carbomb was discovered before its explosion and defused. Chladean sisters nunnery in Zafaraniya One man was slightly injured in these bombings. June 4, 2007. 2 churches attacked. St. Jacob Church, near the Asia Neighborhood (Hay Asya) in Dora, was attacked and the Christian guards killed, the church was looted and will be turned into a mosque. St. John the Baptist Church near the Hay Al-Athoriyeen (Assyrian quarter) was also looted. May 31, 2007. 1 convent attacked. Shiites occupied the Angel Raphael Convent, belonging to the Chaldean Sisters of the Scared Heart, in Dora, Baghdad and turned it into a base for military operations. May 18, 2007. 1 church attacked. St. George Assyrian Church in the Dora neighborhood of Baghdad was firebombed. April 14, 2007. 2 churches, 1 monastery attacked. An Islamic group forcefully removed the Cross from the churches of St. John and St. George in Dora, Baghdad. An affiliated Islamic group in Northern Iraq occupied the Assyrian monastery of Raban Hormuz. November 1, 2006. 1 church bombed. Unknown assailants bombed the entrance of the Dominican Clock Church compound, a Catholic church in Mosul. October 8, 2006. 1 church bombed. Two bombs exploded around 6:30 A.M. near the Church of Virgin Mary on Palestine road in Baghdad. The outer walls of the church were damaged and the windows of many parked cars that belong to the church were shattered. One policeman was killed and many bystanders were injured. October 4, 5 2006. 1 church attacked. A group of men opened fire on the Chaldean Church of the Holy Spirit in Mosul, the second time in 8 days. September 27, 2006. 1 church attacked. A rocket attack was launched against the Chaldean Catholic Church of the Holy Spirit in Mosul. September 24, 2006. 1 church bombed. St. Mary's Cathedral, the home of His Holiness Mar Addai II, Patriarch of The Ancient Church of the East, was bombed. Located in the Riyadh district of Baghdad the cathedral experienced dual bombings, a small IED followed, few minutes after, by a car detonation carrying a large amount of explosives. The bombing was timed to take place as the worshipers were leaving the Sunday morning sermon. 2 were killed and 20 injured. September 8, 2006. 1 church bombed. Two bombs exploded in front of the main gate of a church in al-Za'faraniyya in Baghdad. The explosions caused damage to the church and injured the church guards. June 2, 2006. 1 church bombed. Kaneesat al-Si'aood (The Church of Ascension) in Baghdad was attacked by a rocket bomb. The bomb caused damage to the church building and made a hole in the church dome. February 1 2006. 1 church bombed. The Baghdad Seventh-day Adventist Church was bombed for the second time in two years, injuring an armed guard, one of two permanently stationed to protect the church compound. January 29, 2006. 4 churches bombed. Car bombs exploded outside the Vatican embassy and near four churches in Iraq, killing at least three people. In Kirkuk, three civilians were killed and one wounded in the attack on the Church of the Virgin, and six civilians were hurt in the blast outside an Orthodox church. In Baghdad, car bombs exploded outside St Joseph's Catholic Church in the suburb of Sina'a and an Anglican church in the eastern Nidhal area. November 2, 2005. 1 church bombed. At approximately 5:00 P.M. a car bomb exploded near the Church of Mar Giwargis (St. George) in the Assyrian quarter of Almas district in Kirkuk. 3 were killed. July 16, 2005 1 church bombed. A small explosion rocked the Assyrian Church in Habbaniya, Ramadi in Iraq. There was some damage to the roof of the church. December 7, 2004. 2 churches bombed. The Al-Tahira Chaldean Catholic Church and Armenian church that was under construction were bombed in Mosul. The first blast struck the al-Tahira ("the pure," in reference to the Virgin Mary) Church about 2:30 p.m. in al-Shifa' neighborhood, eastern Mosul. Ten armed men stormed the church, planted explosives throughout it, and set the bombs off wounding three people and destroying most of it. An hour later, gunmen bombed in al-Wahda neighborhood, western Mosul, an Armenian church under construction. No casualties were reported there. November 8, 2004. 1 church bombed. St Bahnam's Catholic church in Dora, Baghdad was bombed, killing 3 people and wounded 40. Police said a car bomb had exploded outside the church, but witnesses said it appeared explosives were planted nearby. October 16, 2004. 5 churches bombed. Five churches were bombed in Baghdad in a coordinated attack. The church of Saint Joseph in the west of the Iraqi capital was hit at about 4:00 am (0100 GMT). Twenty minutes later, another blast ripped through the streets at another Saint Joseph church, in Dora, southern Baghdad. After another 20 minutes, Saint Paul's church was struck in the same area. At 4:50 am, the Roman Catholic St. George church in the central district of Karrada was rocked by a blast and engulfed in flames, leaving the wood-built sanctuary completely charred. A fifth explosion occurred about an hour later at Saint Thomas church in Mansour, to the west. An artillery shell, believed to be intended for the church, was fired into a car park between a hotel and Saint George's Anglican Church. September 11, 2004. 1 church bombed. A car bomb exploded outside the Virgin Mary Seventh-Day Adventist Church in the Al-Sa'doun Park in the center of Baghdad. September 10, 2004. 1 church bombed. A bomb exploded at the Assyrian Anglican Church at al-Andalus Street in Baghdad. The explosion occurred during the night. August 1, 2004. 5 churches bombed. Five Assyrian, and one Armenian, Churches were bombed simultaneously in Baghdad and Mosul. Twelve Assyrians were killed and some 60 injured: Church Sayidat al-Najat (Our Lady of Salvation) - Karrada, Baghdad Church Sayidat al-Zohour (Our Lady of the Flowers) - Karrada, Baghdad (Armenian Catholic Church) Sts. Peter & Paul, Dora, Baghdad St. Paul Church - Center of Mosul St. Elia, Baghdad St. Mary's Church in east Baghdad (car bomb disarmed by police) June 26, 2004. 1 church attacked. Two unidentified men in a silver Opel throw a hand bomb at the Holy Spirit Church (al-Rooh al-Qudos) in the Akha' quarter in Mosul. The explosion injured the sister of the priest
2. wa7adee 17 يناير 2008 - 00:00 بتوقيت القدس
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3. دنخا الاشوري 26 نوفمبر 2008 - 21:47 بتوقيت القدس
حول تفجير الكنائس حول تفجير الكنائس
ان هذا العمل لايقومون بها اخواننا المسلمين الذين من العراق لاننا نعرفهم منذا الاف السنين ان كل هذا العمليات الذي يقومون بها من خارج العراق
قد يهمك ايضا