SYRIA (ANS – October 9, 2015) -- A video released by
the self-proclaimed Islamic State (IS) on October 7, 2015, has showed
the jihadists killing three Assyrian Christian hostages with shots to
the back of their heads.
According to the Assyrian Monitor for Human Rights, it is the first IS video showing Christians in Syria being executed.
“Shown in orange jumpsuits at a desert location, the three Assyrians
knelt in front of their killers who were wearing wide-flowing fatigues
and black masks,” said a story from World Watch Monitor (WWM) -- www.worldwatchmonitor.org
The murdered Christians were among the 253 villagers abducted seven
months ago in north-eastern Syria’s Hassaka province, where IS jihadists
overran 35 Assyrian villages along the Khabur river on February 23,
2015. The three men were named as Dr. Audisho Enwiya and Ashur Abraham,
both from the village of Tel Jazira, and Basam Michael from Tel
Shamiram, the Assyrian International News Agency (AINA) said.
Quoting its own sources, the Assyrian Human Rights Network (AHRN)
dated the murders to September 23, 2015, the morning of this year’s
annual Eid al-Adha (the Muslim Feast of Sacrifice).
“The
new video showed three more identified Assyrian victims, who stressed
that their fate would be the same as the three just shot dead in front
of them, if the militants’ demands were not met,” said World Watch
Monitor.
Zaya, 27, William, 51, and Marden, 49, first called themselves
“Nasrani” [Nazarites, a pejorative Muslim term for Christians], and then
stated their full names and home villages.
WWM went on to say that part of the video was aired by
privately-owned Lebanese OTV, affiliated to the Free Patriotic Movement
headed by veteran politician General Michel Aoun, a Maronite Christian
more recently in political alliance with Hezbollah. IS demanded $50,000
each in ransom for the remaining Assyrians, now believed to number
between 187 and 200. A total of 48 mostly elderly Khabur hostages have
been released sporadically since the initial 23 Feb. abductions.
Syrian Catholic Archbishop Jacques Behnan Hindo of Hassaka had told
Fides News Agency on September 8, 2015, that the kidnappers, contacted
through intermediary negotiators, were “asking for much, much less”
money to release the Khabur Christians after initial demands of $100,000
each.
In a press statement released just after the Assyrians’ execution
video appeared, the European Syriac Union declared, “The ongoing
conflict in the Middle East … is causing irrevocable damage to the
native people, minorities, ethnic and religious groups” of Iraq and
Syria. “From the beginning of the fall of Mosul city until today,
Chaldean-Syriac-Assyrian people and Ezidis [Yazidis] have been subject
to killings, executions, ransom and mass-displacement.”
When
IS captured the town of Qaryatain in the western Syrian province of
Homs in early August, the jihadis snatched Assyrian hostages from at
least 100 families. Fifteen of those were subsequently released, while
the militant group announced a month later that they had imposed the
punitive jizya Islamic tax on the Christians still living in Qaryatain.
The fate of Syrian Catholic Fr. Jacques Mourad, who was abducted from
St. Elian Monastery near Qaryatain in May, remains uncertain, although
pictures of him in captivity were shown on a number of Lebanese
television stations in August.
Photo captions: 1) Islamic State killers take over another Syrian
town. 2) Another brutal murder by IS. 3) Kidnapped Syrian Catholic
priest Fr. Jacques Mourad 4) Dan Wooding reporting for ANS from outside
the Kurdistan Parliament in Erbil, Northern Iraq.
SOURCE: ASSIST NEWS