Christians all over
Archbishop Paulos Faraj Rahho,
leader of the Chaldean Catholic Church in
Rahho’s body was found by police in the city’s Intisar neighborhood. The authorities could not say whether he died of natural causes or due to bad health or injuries. Church officials told AsiaNews that the archbishop had had a heart attack two years ago. According to the New York Times, the archbishop was suffering from high blood pressure and diabetes. His death could have been caused by lack of his medication.
An autopsy found that he had been dead for five days and there were no signs of violence on his body.
But
“He was wounded when they killed his security and as a result he died,” Hamdani said.
Nineveh Deputy Gov. Khasro Goran said that Rahho’s abductors have been pretending he is still alive hoping to receive a ransom. The kidnappers demanded three million dollars for Rahho’s release. Moreover, they had demanded Christians take part in the jihad, and also the release of Arab fellows held in Kurdish prisons.
Both Hamdani and Goran blamed the
archbishop’s death on Al Qaeda in
Pope Benedict called Rahho's death “an act of inhuman violence that offends the dignity of the human being.”
“I deplore the despicable act of violence committed against the Archbishop of Mosul,” U.S. President George W. Bush said in a statement.
Assyrian Christian politician
Romeo Hakkari, a member of the Kurdistan regional parliament, warned that
“There is a great threat to
Christians as a religion and ethnicity. I don't recall a day in
In the last few years, Christians
in