Showing posts with label Terrorists. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Terrorists. Show all posts

8.9.15

ISIS Demands Christians Pay Islam Tax

SIS terrorists gathered together dozens of Christian men in Syria and told them to either pay a Shariah-inspired tax and sign onto a list of faith-based restrictions, or pay a penalty that could include loss of life.
The tax, called a jizya, as well as the contract, are aimed at ensuring Christians know and abide by their forced second-class citizenship, or “dhimmi” status, in the ISIS dominated areas.
Among the restrictions: Christians cannot own guns, build places of worship, show their crosses in public or even ring church bells, the Blaze reported.
The terrorists put forth their demands to Christian men gathered in the town of Qaryatain, a community that used to be home to thousands of the faith but is now dominated by radical Muslims.
The Middle East Media Research Institute reported the contract also forced Christians to “respect Muslims and not criticize their religion,” the Blaze reported.
In 11 contract clauses, signers also agreed to “not make Muslims hear the reciting of their books or the sounds of church bells,” “not carry out any act of aggression against ISIS, such as giving refuge to spies and wanted men,” “no engage in commercial activity involving pigs or alcohol with Muslims,” and “must abide by ISIS dress code and commerce guidelines,” MEMRI found.
In return, ISIS pledged to protect the men and their properties.
The tax ranged between one and four gold dinars, depending on level of wealth.

28.7.15

In Iraq, Christian Militia Battles Islamic State Militants: 'ISIS Terrorists Are Our Enemy'

Muslim militias aren’t the only forces taking on the Islamic State group as it continues its spread across Iraq. Christians driven from their homes in Mosul by the fighting have also formed their own brigade, battling alongside anti-ISIS Muslim militias in hopes of exacting revenge and taking back their city.

"[They] displaced us from our houses, they took our money, killed our young men and women and they took our properties," the group's commander, Rayan Al-Kildani, told NBC News. "Therefore, Christians decided to fight the terrorists of ISIS."

The militia, about 1,000 men strong, calls itself the Bablyon Brigades. It is the only Christian formation within the Popular Mobilization Forces, which is an almost exclusively Shiite umbrella of brigades backed by the Iraqi and Iranian governments to fight ISIS. The Babylon Brigades formed in June 2014, immediately after Mosul, Iraq’s second-largest city, fell to the Sunni extremist group.

"ISIS terrorists do not differentiate among Christians, Muslims, Sunnis and Shiites – they kill everyone," Al-Kildani told NBC. "We have to help our Muslim brothers liberate Iraq."

Christians wanting to take up arms against ISIS, and lacking foriegn backers, are increasingly turning toward Shiite militias, as International Business Times reported from Lebanon earlier this year.

Fighters who spoke with NBC said Iraq had a strong history of religious coexistence – a peace that was brutally upended as ISIS pushed some 125,000 Christians from their homes in a 10-month span, according to CBS News. When ISIS took over Mosul, they demanded Christians convert, be subjected to a crippling tax or leave the city by foot. Subsequently, significant Christian artifacts, along with homes and businesses, were pillaged and destroyed.

For the first time in 2,000 years, there are no Christians left in Mosul, as the city became an early warning of what ISIS control would mean for other cities cross Iraq and Syria that would later fall to its forces. ISIS imposed a stringent interpretation of Islamic law and responded to dissent with harsh corporal punishment and execution.

"I found myself in a position to fight in order to restore what we lost," Yousef Hani Shamon, a 27-year-old Christian who fled the city by foot, told NBC. "ISIS terrorists are our enemy. They targeted our religion, and that is why I have to fight them."

This month, Shiite militias and the Iraqi military launched a counter-offensive to recapture Anbar province in the west from ISIS. Much of the fighting has focused on the outskirts of Fallujah, a strategically important city whose capture could signal a significant turning point for the anti-ISIS forces. It was unclear whether the Christian brigade was involved in any of the recent fighting in Anbar, a mainly Sunni region.