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  1. #1
    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    18 dead in presumed migrant accident

    18 dead in presumed migrant accident

    THESSALONIKI, Greece (AP) — Eighteen bodies have been found in a coastal area near the borders of Turkey and Greece, and they appear to be illegal immigrants who died in a boat accident, authorities said Tuesday.
    Eight of the bodies — seven men and one boy — were found over several days beginning Thursday in Greece near the border city of Alexandroupolis. Two of those bodies were found tangled in nets by local fishermen. The others were recovered on an abandoned coastline or in the sea, police and coast guard officials said. One of the victims was carrying Iraqi identity papers.

    In Turkey, 10 bodies have washed ashore at the Saros Bay near the border area over the past three days, said Adnan Cakiroglu, local governor of the Turkish town of Gelibolu. They included eight adult men, one women and one child.

    Cakiroglu said at least five of the victims found in Turkey had been identified as Iraqis.

    The bodies were discovered in a 25-mile area. Authorities in both countries said they believed the dead came from a single vessel.

    "It's unusual for people to try and reach this region by boat," Michalis Kouyioumtzis, deputy regional governor of Greece's Evros border region, told The Associated Press. He said he believed the illegal immigrants were caught in sudden bad weather and probably traveled in a vessel that was barely seaworthy.

    "When people without any conscience pack (immigrants) into small boats, this is the result you get," Kouyioumtzis said.

    The discovery of the Iraqi identity papers prompted authorities to speculate that the victims were illegal immigrants who drowned after their boat sank. Many Iraqis have fled the war in their country, which borders Turkey.

    No wreckage of a boat has been found, but a state coroner in Greece who examined the bodies said they had drowned.

    Greece is a busy transit point for illegal immigrants seeking entry into the European Union, with many risking their lives to make the trip.

    Last month, four Georgian illegal immigrants were killed after entering a minefield on Greece's militarized border with Turkey.

    Migrants typically head by boat from Turkey's coast to nearby Greek islands or cross the Evros River that runs along most of the Greek-Turkish border.

    On Tuesday, Greece's merchant marine ministry said 10,659 illegal immigrants had been detained by the coast guard and 173 smuggling suspects had been arrested in the first nine months of 2008.

    Eight illegal immigrants were arrested Tuesday on the Aegean Sea island of Lesvos, and said they had paddled from the nearby Turkish coast in three small dinghies

    http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/2008 ... dies_N.htm
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  2. #2
    Senior Member Dixie's Avatar
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    Illegal Immigrants, Spies or Terrorist... You decide.

    You know they use children to blow up buildings and human targets.

    Dixie
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  3. #3
    Senior Member Captainron's Avatar
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    A lot of Christians have been wanting to get out of Iraq, now that both Islamic factions are enjoying a lot more "self-determination." Who knows who these people are---but I thought overall security was supposed to be improving?

    Chicago lawyer finds mission in helping Iraqi Christian refugeesRobert DeKelaita, himself from Iraq, has helped hundreds gain asylum in the US.
    By David Zucchino | Los Angeles Times
    from the April 28, 2008 edition


    San Diego - The immigration lawyer and his client huddled at the defense bench in federal court, whispering in Aramaic.

    Robert DeKelaita, born and baptized Christian in Iraq and raised in the US, dwarfed his client, a frightened young Iraqi named Yousif Ibrahim.

    Mr. Ibrahim, a Christian, had been jailed as a "deportable/inadmissible alien" since walking across the US-Mexican border in May.

    Minutes later, Mr. DeKelaita described how Ibrahim's father had been killed by Muslim insurgents in Iraq — because he was a Christian working for the UN and because another son had served in the US armed forces.

    "He cannot go back to Iraq.... He has established credible fear" of persecution, DeKelaita told the immigration judge.

    When the judge set a new hearing, DeKelaita told Ibrahim he would be freed.

    Over the past decade, DeKelaita has obtained asylum for hundreds of Iraqi Christians facing deportation here, after fleeing religious persecution in Iraq.

    But each success leaves DeKelaita conflicted. "My heart is wedded to the idea that they should be safe and secure in their own homeland," DeKelaita says inside his law office in Skokie, Ill. "What I'm doing is temporary."

    Repressed under Saddam Hussein, Iraq's Christian population has been decimated since the US invasion in 2003. Muslim extremists have murdered priests and burned Christian churches, shops, and homes. Priests in Iraq estimate that fewer than 500,000 Christians remain, about a third of the number before 2003.

    DeKelaita is among a handful of immigration lawyers who specialize in representing Iraqi Christians.


    Many Christians Flee Iraq, With Syria the Haven of ChoiceNY Times

    By KATHERINE ZOEPF


    DAMASCUS, Syria, Aug. 4 - Abdulkhalek Sharif Nuaman likes to talk as he works, removing bubbly Iraqi bread from his ovens on long pallets. The baker is a cheerful man, yet his florid face darkens as he explains why he decided to flee Iraq.

    Two months ago, Mr. Nuaman says, he was both a member of Iraq's small Mandaean sect, and a patriot with high hopes for the country's democratic future. Then Islamist extremists began attacking Christians in his Baghdad neighborhood, and his 9-year-old son was kidnapped, dragged into a moving car as he played near the family home.

    After relatives scraped together $5,000 to ransom the boy, the family decided enough was enough and left, driving across the desert into Syria to apply for refugee status.

    "We are safe here, and so we feel free," Mr. Nuaman said of his new home in the Damascus suburb of Jaramana. "The Syrians are brothers to us. There is no discrimination here. That is the truth, and not a compliment."

    Iraq is home to some of the world's oldest religious communities, including Assyrians, an early, now independent Christian sect; Chaldeans, Eastern-rite Catholics who recognize papal authority; and the Mandaeans, who follow John the Baptist.

    Yet, attacks on Iraq's tiny Christian minority have been steadily increasing since late spring, culminating in the bombing of five Christian churches in Baghdad and Mosul on Sunday. As a result, according to the United Nations high commissioner for refugees, Christians are now fleeing the country in record numbers.

    Ajmal Khybari, an official at the refugee agency's Damascus office, said about 4,000 Iraqi families had registered as refugees in Syria. Although they represent less than 5 percent of Iraq's population, Iraqi Christians now make up about 20 percent of the total refugee flow into Syria from Iraq, Mr. Khybari said.

    Rita Zekert, the coordinator of the Caritas Migrant Center, a Catholic charity in Damascus that provides food, medicine and other aid to new refugees, said last year's wartime influx of Iraqi refugees included Sunni and Shiite Muslims, Christians and Kurds in percentages roughly proportionate to their numbers in Iraq. "But nowadays, 95 percent of the people coming to us are Iraqi Christians," Ms. Zekert said.

    Though Iraqi Christians are heading to Jordan and Lebanon as well, Mr. Khybari said, Syria is the preferred destination, for its low cost of living, cultural similarities with Iraq and policy of freely issuing visas to citizens of other Arab countries. "For people of a very depleted economic status, Syria is an easier choice," he said.

    Yet most of Syria's newest Iraqi Christian refugees say the decision to leave their homeland was anything but easy. They tell of Christian shopkeepers killed by Islamist gangs for daring to sell alcohol, of family businesses sold to ransom stolen children. They say life in Syria is hard for them, as new refugees are often barred from jobs and schools. They left Iraq, they say, only because they were too terrorized to stay.

    Solaka Enweya, 56, an Assyrian Christian who arrived in Syria with his three sons on June 27, explained that attacks on Christians had become common since Saddam Hussein's government was toppled, in part because of the perception that Iraqi Christians are aiding the Americans. But like other refugees here, he said attacks on Iraqi Christians increased this spring.

    "When we heard that the Americans were going to liberate Iraq, we were so happy," Mr. Enweya said. "Yet our suffering has only increased."

    He said his family had been receiving vague death threats since the start of the war, in March 2003. But beginning in April, he said, a local Islamist group began directly threatening his sons because of their faith. Then they blew up his van. Mr. Enweya had run a small delivery service, and with the loss of the van, his whole livelihood disappeared.

    "Saddam didn't allow for people to incite religious life like this," he said. "We Christians have suffered so much. Our only choice was to come to Syria."

    Suhair Mikhail, 33, recalls walking home from her church in Baghdad this spring with a friend, a young woman from her choir.

    "A car stopped, and three men got out," she said. "They began tearing my friend's clothes. They said, 'Because this is the first time we see you unveiled, we will only strip you. The next time, we will kill you.' "

    Despite the growing frequency of attacks and humiliations, the leaders of Iraq's Christians are urging their members to remain in Iraq or, if they have already left, to return.

    "These terrorists are playing on the sectarian conflicts," said Emmanuel Khoshaba, a spokesman for the Assyrian Democratic Movement, a political party of Iraq's Assyrian Christians. "Before, they were tampering with Sunni-Shia relations. Now it's the Christians' turn."

    He is especially worried that the church bombings will bring a new wave of refugees. Mr. Khoshaba counsels Christians to be patient.

    "Iraq is in a new stage of its history," Mr. Khoshaba said. "We have free speech, and places in the national assembly. Chaldeans and Assyrians are some of Iraq's most ancient people. It will be terrible if they leave before we can taste the fruits of Iraq's democracy."
    "Men of low degree are vanity, Men of high degree are a lie. " David
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