Tuesday, September 13, 2016

Rep. Fortenberry Introduces Congressional Resolution to Establish Safe Haven for Religious Minorities in Northern Iraq



SEP 13, 2016, 08:52 ET

News provided by
The Philos Project


Rep. Fortenberry Introduces Congressional Resolution to Establish Safe Haven for Religious Minorities in Northern Iraq


WASHINGTON, Sept. 13, 2016/PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- On Friday, Rep. Jeff Fortenberry (R-NE) introduced a bipartisan Congressional Resolution that supports the establishment of a safe haven province for persecuted religious minorities in the Nineveh Plain region of Iraq.

Drafted in collaboration between The Philos Project, In Defense of Christians, and the Institute for Global Engagement, H.Con.Res 152 is a response to declarations by Congress and the State Department last March that ISIL is responsible for genocide against religious minority groups in areas under its control.


"Christians, Yazidis, and other ethnic and religious minorities have been slaughtered and driven from their homes by ISIL's horrific genocide," Fortenberry said at the introduction. "One next step must be the re-securitization and revitalization of the Nineveh Plain, allowing the repatriation of those who had to flee… This resolution, which follows on the Government of Iraq's own initiative to create a province in the Nineveh Plain region, seeks to restore the ancestral homeland of so many suffering communities."

Cosponsors include: Reps. Dan Lipinski(D-IL), Chris Smith (R-NJ), Juan Vargas(D-CA), Trent Franks (R-AZ), Jan Schakowsky (D-IL), Robert Aderholt(R-AL), Rob Wittman (R-VA), Dan Donovan (R-NY), Andy Harris (R-MD),Barbara Comstock (R-VA), Joe Pitts(R-PA).

"Without a strategy to decentralize power to Iraq's various regional communities and allow each to protect and govern itself at the local level, the future of Iraq is very uncertain," said Philos Project Executive DirectorRobert Nicholson.

For centuries, the Nineveh Plain region has been the ancestral homeland of Assyrian-Chaldean-Syriac Christians, Yazidis, and other minorities. With the ongoing liberation of Iraqi territory from ISIL by coalition forces, American policymakers must now consider the United States' role in a post-ISIL Iraq and Syria.

"The province would provide a zone of stability and influence that will weaken violent Islamic factions, and protect against a post-ISIL vacuum," Nicholson said.

Statements either granting autonomy to religious minorities or supporting the creation of a safe haven in the Nineveh region have been made by the Kurdistan Regional Government (2009), the Iraqi Cabinet (2014), various gatherings of Assyrian political leaders (2003, 2005, 2014, 2015), the European Parliament (2015), the U.S. Senate Committee on Appropriations (2011, 2014), and the U.S. Republican Party (2016), and others.


SOURCE The Philos Project




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