Kerry: ISIS Ideology, Practice Is ‘Genocidal’
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry surprised lawmakers,
human rights advocates, and perhaps diplomats, by announcing March 17 he had
determined Islamic State (ISIS) is committing genocide against Christians and
other minorities in Iraq and Syria.
Only one day before, the State Department issued a statement
saying Kerry’s determination would be delayed past the deadline written into
last year’s omnibus spending bill, signifying how contentious and protracted
the issue had become at the highest levels of the Obama administration.
Speaking to reporters in Washington that morning, Kerry said
he had completed his review and
determined that Christians, Yazidis, and Shiite
groups are victims of genocide and crimes against humanity by ISIS militants.
“In my judgment, Daesh is responsible for genocide against
groups in territory under its control,” Kerry said, using the Arabic acronym
for ISIS. The secretary went on to outline a litany of atrocities that he said
the militants have committed against people and religious sites, as well as
threats: “Daesh is genocidal by self-acclimation, by ideology, and by
practice.”
Lawmakers who on Monday passed a resolution drawing
virtually the same conclusion—in a 393-0 vote—applauded the action. House
Foreign Affairs Committee chairman Ed Royce, R-Calif., said Kerry “is finally
making the right call.”
Reps. Jeff Fortenberry, R-Neb., and Ann Eshoo, D-Calif., led
the bipartisan effort, introducing the genocide resolution in September. But it
gained little traction among lawmakers until Congress added the spending bill
deadline and human rights groups came together with reports documenting ISIS
atrocities. Last week, the Knights of Columbus, the Catholic fraternal service
organization, submitted to Kerry a 278-page report containing reams of
documentation—including more than 60 pages of eyewitness accounts of
atrocities; a 34-page, single-spaced list of Christians murdered by Islamic
militants; and Islamic State paperwork related to the sale of Christian and
Yazidi women.
Spearheading an effort that included Catholic, Orthodox, and
Protestant (including evangelical) leaders, the Knights of Columbus and Hudson
Institute fellow Nina Shea in December put together a direct appeal to Kerry to
declare ISIS actions genocide not only of Yazidis but also Christians. They
urged him to take steps to protect both populations. Their formal letter went
unanswered until recent days.
“The United States has now spoken with clarity and moral
authority,” Fortenberry said after Kerry’s announcement. The Nebraska
Republican said he now hopes the genocide designation “will raise international
consciousness, end the scandal of silence, and create the preconditions for the
protection and reintegration of these ancient faith communities into their
ancestral homelands.”
In Iraq, one church leader (who asked not to be named for
security reasons), told me, “Christians have been praying that Mr. Obama does
the right thing … and we thank God He has responded to our prayer.”
Under Title 22 of the U.S. legal code and the Genocide
Convention Implementation Act of 1987, the president and secretary of state are
required only to establish whether there is probable cause to believe that ISIS
is committing murders, rapes, and kidnappings with the specific intent to
destroy religious minorities, according to leading legal authorities. That’s a
finding that could have been reached months and months ago, say Catholic
University law professor Robert A. Destro and religious liberty attorney L.
Martin Nussbaum, writing for Politico on March 15.
“With the bar so low, with the law so clear, with the
evidence so overwhelming, and with the international community and the House of
Representatives so united in their judgment that genocide is occurring, the
burden shifts to the lawyers to explain why they are exposing their
clients—Secretary Kerry and President Barack Obama—to the charge that they ‘did
nothing’ in the face of evil,” the pair of legal experts wrote.
Already, though, the Obama administration has said a
genocide determination would do little to change its actual military posture
and overall policy on Iraq and Syria.
In Rome, Syria’s visiting Chaldean bishop, Antoine Audo
(WORLD’s 2013 Daniel of the Year), acknowledged it may be too late, anyway.
Underscoring the seriousness of the situation, and absent international
intervention, Audo told reporters on March 16 he believes two-thirds of Syria’s
Christian population—which numbered 1.5 million in 2011—has fled the country or
been killed. In the embattled city of Aleppo, where he lives, he said the
exodus was greater: Only 40,000 of its once 160,000-strong Christian community
remains.
“You cannot imagine the dangers that we face every day,” he
said.
Source: Christian Headlines

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