BEIRUT: ISIS have abducted 220 Assyrian Christians in northeastern Syria in recent days, an activist group said Thursday, as international concern grows for the minority group.
The kidnappings - more than twice as many as previously reported - have prompted thousands more Christians to flee their homes to avoid being captured by the Sunni Muslim extremists, activists said.
"No fewer than 220 Assyrian citizens were abducted by IS over the past three days from 11 villages" in Hassakeh province, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said, using an alternative name for ISIS.
"Negotiations are under way through mediators from Arab tribes and a member of the Assyrian community to secure the release of the hostages," the Britain-based group said.
Many of the abductees are said to be women, children or elderly.
They were taken as ISIS stormed several Assyrian villages under the control of Kurdish and Christian forces.
The Observatory said 14 Kurdish fighters and three members of an Assyrian defense organization had been killed in three days of fighting for the villages.
The United States and United Nations denounced the mass abduction of Christians - the first of its kind in the war-torn country - and demanded their release.
"ISIL's latest targeting of a religious minority is only further testament to its brutal and inhumane treatment of all those who disagree with its divisive goals and toxic beliefs," State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said, using another acronym for ISIS.
The U.N. Security Council also condemned the abductions, demanding the hostages be immediately and unconditionally freed.
Osama Edward, director of the Assyrian Human Rights Network, told AFP Wednesday he believed the abductions were linked to the jihadis' recent loss of ground in the face of U.S.-led air raids.
"They took the hostages to use them as human shields," he said.
The jihadis, who are battling Kurdish fighters on the ground, may try to exchange the Assyrians for ISIS prisoners, he said.
The kidnappings and assault by ISIS on several Assyrian villages in Hassakeh prompted thousands of members of the community to flee.
Many sought refuge in Qamishli, a large city in the province that is controlled by Kurdish and regime forces.
"We've received around 200 families who are being hosted in local homes," Jean Tolo of Qamishli's Assyrian Organisation for Relief and Development, told AFP.
"The people arriving are desperate. They are coming with nothing, they left everything behind."
Before Syria's civil war erupted in 2011, there were 30,000 Assyrians in the country, among an estimated Christian population of about 1.2 million.
The Assyrians, from one of the world's oldest Christian communities, have faced an increasing threat since ISIS captured large parts of Syria.
In Libya, an ISIS branch last week released a video showing the beheading of 21 Coptic Christians, mostly Egyptians.
In Washington, Secretary of State John Kerry said the United States and Iran had a "mutual interest" in defeating ISIS but said the long-time foes were not cooperating to do so.
"They are totally opposed to ISIL and they are in fact taking on and fighting and eliminating ISIL members along the Iraqi border near Iran and have serious concerns about what that would do to the region," Kerry told lawmakers.
"So we have at least a mutual interest, if not a cooperative effort."
Kerry, who has been pivotal to the U.S. drive to strike a deal to curb Iran's nuclear ambitions, said Washington had not asked Tehran to get involved in the fight against ISIS.
Jihadi sites meanwhile launched a social media campaign in support of ISIS' self-proclaimed "Islamic caliphate" with new threats against the West - in particular Britain, France and the United States.
Syria's war began in March 2011 as peaceful pro-democracy protests against President Bashar Assad but escalated into a brutal civil war that brought foreign jihadis flocking to the country.
France's Prime Minister Manuel Valls Thursday "condemned with the greatest strength" a decision by three French lawmakers to meet Assad, whom he described as "a butcher."
"For parliamentarians to go without warning to meet a butcher ... I think it was a moral failing," Valls said after the cross-party group made an unofficial trip to Damascus Wednesday.
Source: Top Stories - Google News - http://ift.tt/1MUzrVv
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