January 18, 2005
Iraq: Kidnapping Of Catholic Archbishop Highlights Christians' Plight
by Valentinas Mite
This Baghdad church was bombed in August
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Iraq's Roman Catholic Archbishop Basile Georges Casmoussa has been released following his abduction yesterday in the northern city of Mosul. The cleric was the highest-ranking Catholic prelate to be targeted in Iraq. But his abduction was only the latest in a series of attacks against Iraq's Christians, who make up less than 3 percent of the country's population but an important part of its culture and society.
Prague, 18 January 2005 (RFE/RL) -- The Vatican said Iraqi Archbishop Basile Georges Casmoussa was freed this morning in Mosul without a ransom being paid.
Vatican spokesman Joaquin Navarro-Valls also confirmed reports no ransom had been paid.
Cesare Baldoni is an editor with Misna, an Italian missionary news agency. He spoke to reporters in Rome today: "He appears to be well, in excellent health. He returned to the diocese in good health and there were no problems."
Casmoussa was kidnapped yesterday by gunmen in two cars in the Al-Majmua Al-Thaqafiyah district of Mosul, Iraq's third largest city and its Christian center.
The Vatican, which opposed the U.S. invasion of Iraq, called the abduction a "terrorist act."
Casmoussa is the head of a 35,000-strong Syrian Catholic, or Chaldean, church in Mosul. The Syrian Catholic Church observes the Liturgy of St. James, performed in Syriac, an eastern dialect of ancient Aramaic, which is believed to be the language Jesus Christ used. It is practiced mostly in Iraq and Lebanon and has pledged its allegiance to the Roman Catholic Church since the 17th century.
Almost all of Iraq's Christian denominations -- Assyrian, Syrian, Armenian, and Greek -- recognize the supremacy of the Holy See.
The motives of the abduction are unclear, but it came amid mounting violence in the run-up to this month's parliamentary elections. William Warda, a spokesman for Assyrian Democratic Movement, a Christian political party, suggested the abduction might be an attempt to intimidate the community into staying at home on polling day.