France has been re-establishing its historical role of protecting Christian minorities in the Middle East. Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius has been rallying support for persecuted Christians in Syria and Iraq, calling for action from the UN Security Council last week. Pope Francis evoked the plight of Eastern Christians in his annual Easter message on Sunday. The Pope called on the international community to not stand by "before the immense humanitarian tragedy" unfolding in Syria and Iraq. Islamic State militants have targeted religious minorities, killing hundreds of Iraqi and Syrian Yazidis and Christians. Last month the group kidnapped some 220 Assyrian Christians in Syria, prompting 5,000 people to leave their homes, fearful of more violence. The group has attacked Christians in neighbouring Iraq, notably during an offensive in June of last year. Fabius warned the Security Council that without action, "minorities will disappear entirely" from Syria and Iraq. Though since last summer, he has been particularly focused on Christians. At the end of July he and Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve announced that France would help facilitate visas for Iraqi and Syrian Christians seeking refuge in France. "There is a certain historic relationship with Eastern Christians," explains Jean Maher, the head of Chredo, an organisation that lobbies France to help Eastern Christians. He points to France's relationship with Christians in Lebanon: In the early 20th century, after the First World War, France gained control of parts of the Ottoman empire, including Lebanon and Syria, and was seen by Maronite Christians in Lebanon as a liberating force. Maher says that France has now taken up its role as historical "protector" in the face of "danger coming to the Syrians and now the Iraqis". That danger is the rise of the Islamic State militant group, though Maher, who is Egyptian and has been in France for 40 years, says the persecution of Christians pre-dates the armed group. Christians have been under threat from Islamists in Syria, but Western nations who were planning a course of action against the Assad regime were not addressing the problem. "Nobody was talking about the Christians," says Maher, about discussions over what to do in Syria. Coming to the aid of Christians "makes things more complicated", he adds. Complications arise over alliances: Backing the opposition against Assad puts France on the side of Islamists, many of whom are trying to rid Syria of Christians. The rise of the Islamic State armed group in Iraq allowed France to get involved more directly. French political support Support for Eastern Christians picked up steam last summer, when France promised visas to refugees and Fabius promised to take the issue to the United Nations. Whereas previously the issue was taken up by clergy, there is now growing political support. "The atrocities of the Islamic State [armed group] have certainly woken people up," says MP G
France Taking Lead on Protecting Iraqi and Syrian Christians
By Sarah Elzas
Posted 2015-04-07 05:31 GMT
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