Vice President Adel Abdul-Mahdi said the assault was “very painful” for the stunned nation because “it harbors a sinister plan to empty the region of one of its main components: the Christians.”
An Iraqi police commander was detained for questioning Tuesday in connection with the deadly attack on a Catholic church in the capital as a top political leader blamed the carnage in part on lax security.
Meanwhile, hundreds of grieving Christians and other Iraqis packed a funeral service for the dead in a sanctuary not far from the Our Lady of Salvation Church, where Islamic militants killed 58 people and wounded nearly 80 in a shocking attack during a Sunday-evening Mass…
An Iraqi military spokesman said Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki ordered the detention of the police commander, whom he did not identify by name. The commander was in charge of securing the Karradah neighborhood in Baghdad where Our Lady of Salvation is located.
The attack was the worst in years on Iraq’s already dwindling Christian community.
Vice President Adel Abdul-Mahdi said the assault was “very painful” for the stunned nation because “it harbors a sinister plan to empty the region of one of its main components: the Christians.”
“Such bombings in Iraq refer to an important security breach which should be quickly handled,” Mr. Abdul-Mahdi, in Damascus, Syria, told the Associated Press…
France offered late Monday to grant asylum to 150 Iraqi Christians, including some of those wounded in the siege.
Read More: http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2010/nov/2/iraqi-police-commander-held-church-attack/?page=1
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