Assyrian Christian leaders call for help against renewed ISIS offensive in Hassakeh

Kurdish People's Protection forces guarding the Assyrian village of Tel Jumaa, north of Tel Tamr town, February 25, 2015. Reuters

Assyrian Christian leaders are calling for help as Islamic State attacks escalate in northern Syria.

Islamic State fighters launched a series of attacks in late February against Christian villages in Syria's northeastern Hassakeh province and abducted more than 200 hostages, including Assyrian Christians and Kurds. Nineteen of these Assyrians were released afterwards, while 52 more were reportedly set free by the ISIS last Thursday and Friday, according to the Rome-based agency Asia News.

Now, Assyrian Christian leaders are warning of additional attacks from the Islamic State.

"This is a very dangerous situation," Bassam Ishak, president of the Syriac National Council of Syria, warned in an article on the Assyrian International News Agency or AINA.

"The villages on the south side of the (Khabur River) are in the hands of Islamic State militants. They took Tal Nasri, which is very close to Tal Tamar," Ishak added, referring to the Syrian town that is on the crossroads that lead to Syria's second biggest city, Aleppo, and into Hassakeh province itself.

Ishak's organisation, together with the the European Syriac Union, and the Christian Coalition for Syria, also released a joint statement describing the full situation that Christians in Hassakeh province face.

"(The Islamic State) try to cross the Khabur with large numbers of fighters and heavy weapons," the statement said. It went on to describe the apparent strength of the Islamic State forces that are allegedly preparing to step up offensives more powerful than the Kurdish and Christian militias combined.

The statement said that the Khabur River's water level has dropped and that the ISIS could be preparing to cross. The groups urged Turkey to increase the water flow in the Khabur in an attempt to deter the militants' progress.

The groups are requesting that Turkey re-open its borders so refugees can cross to safety 

"1.5 million Christians, Kurds, and other civilians are at risk," the statement added. "(There is an) urgent need for more international humanitarian and military assistance,"

News
Glastonbury and the banality of evil
Glastonbury and the banality of evil

When the Glastonbury mob were calling for death to the IDF, they were in effect calling for the death of Israeli Jews.

Who were the Anabaptists?
Who were the Anabaptists?

This year is the 500th anniversary of the founding of the Anabaptist movement - a chapter in Christian history that is not so well known.

Faith leaders say taxing rich will bring down energy bills, help environment
Faith leaders say taxing rich will bring down energy bills, help environment

The call is, not for the first time, to tax the rich

Fears for free speech in Europe
Fears for free speech in Europe

The Alliance Defending Freedom International has warned that free speech in Europe is facing its gravest threat since the days of the Soviet Union and the Warsaw Pact.