Car bomb targeting Iraq church kills 17

The attack on St. John church in the Dura area of south Baghdad also wounded at least 34 people.

By (AFP)

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Published: Wed 25 Dec 2013, 5:43 PM

Last updated: Tue 7 Apr 2015, 5:33 PM

A car bomb targeted a church in the Iraqi capital on Wednesday as worshippers left after Christmas Mass, killing at least 17 people, security officials said.

The blast in the Dura area of south Baghdad also wounded at least 34 people, the sources said.

“The attack targeted the church, and most of the dead are Christians,” a police colonel said.

“The attack on St. John church occurred when worshippers were leaving after attending Christmas Mass,” he said.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack.

“Attacks distort the image of Islam and religion, if they are carrying them out in the name of religion,” Monsignor Pios Cacha of Baghdad’s St. Joseph church said.

“The church is a place of love and peace, and not for wars,” Cacha said.

Earlier in the year, Cacha had said that “maybe we will follow in the steps of our Jewish brothers,” referring to a once-thriving community that has since emigrated in droves.

Iraq has seen its Christian population sharply decline in the years since 2003, when the United States led an invasion of the country that ended the rule of Saddam Hussein, as they were caught up in violence.

Before 2003 more than a million Christians lived in Iraq. Now there are around 400,000, according to Chaldean Patriarch Louis Sako, head of one of the world’s oldest Christian communities.

Some 61 churches have been attacked in the decade since the US-led invasion, Sako said, with more than 1,000 Christians killed in violence, albeit not all in targeted attacks.

The bloodiest single attack on the community happened on October 31, 2010, when militants killed 44 worshippers and two priests in Baghdad’s Our Lady of Salvation church.

Violence in Iraq has surged this year to levels not seen since 2008, when the country was just emerging from a brutal period of sectarian unrest.

More than 6,650 people have been killed in Iraq since the beginning of 2013, according to AFP figures based on security and medical sources.


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