(http://www.washingtonpost.com/)  

 
 
 




UN raps Sweden for  deporting Iraqi Christians
By BARBARA SURK
The Associated Press
Friday, December 17,  2010; 11:38 AM 
BAGHDAD -- The U.N. criticized Sweden on Friday for deporting five Iraqi  
Christians back to their homeland as Iraq's Christian community comes under  
severe threat of militant attacks.  
Thousands of Iraqi Christians have fled abroad or to the relative safety of 
 Iraq's northern Kurdish region since an Oct. 31 siege on a Catholic church 
in  Baghdad that was taken hostage during a Mass service by suicide bombers 
who  ultimately killed 68 people.  
The U.N.'s High Commission for Refugees said the five deported Christians  
were part of a group of at least 20 Iraqis who failed to gain asylum in 
Sweden  and were flown out on Wednesday.  
In a Friday release, the refugee agency called itself "dismayed" over the  
deportation and called on countries to take in Iraqis from Baghdad, Kirkuk 
and  three northern provinces that the U.N. considers unsafe because of 
repeated  attacks, sectarian tensions and human rights violations.  
"We have heard many accounts of people fleeing their homes after receiving  
direct threats," said Melissa Fleming, a Geneva-based spokeswoman for the 
U.N.  agency. "Many of the new arrivals explain they've left in fear as a 
result of  the church attack on Oct. 31."  
"Some were able to take only a few belongings with them," Fleming said.  
Wednesday's deportations come less than a week after an Iraqi-born Swede 
blew  himself up in a botched bombing in central Stockholm, killing himself 
and  injuring two people. They also come as fears steadily grow due to attacks 
by  Islamic extremists on Christians and churches across Iraq.  
An al-Qaida-linked group claimed responsibility for the October church  
massacre, threatening even more violence against Iraq's remaining Christians.  
Fleming estimated 1,000 families have left Baghdad and the northern Ninevah 
 province since the October attack. She cited a "a slow but steady exodus" 
of  Christians headed abroad or to the relative safety of the self-rule 
Kurdish  region in northern Iraq.  
U.S. officials in Syria, Jordan and Lebanon also reported a growing number 
of  Iraqi Christians arriving and asking the agency for help, Fleming said.  
In Syria, the agency estimated about 133 families - or about 300 
individuals  - have reached out to applied for refugee status since November. 
Most 
cited the  church siege as their reason for fleeing.  
The number of Christians who applied for asylum with the U.N. in Jordan 
also  doubled in the past two months compared to the same time last year, the 
agency  said.  
Also Friday, a roadside bomb in southeast Baghdad exploded as Shiite 
pilgrims  were returning home from the holy city of Karbala in the south, after 
final  ceremonies ended for Ashoura, the Shiite Muslims' most solemn religious 
event of  the year. Eight pilgrims were wounded, according to police and 
hospital  officials who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not 
authorized  to speak to the media.  
---  
Associated Press Writer Mazin Yahya contributed to this report.  
© 2010 The  Associated Press  



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