
© Omar Sanadiki / ReutersPeople gather by a Christmas tree during Christmas eve in the old city of Homs, Syria
Since the nineties it has been apparent even in secular company that persecution of Christians was rampant in some countries. Yet beyond lip service, there is no international effort to change this disastrous situation.
More Christians died for their faith in the past century alone than in the history of Christianity to that point - chiefly at the hands of atheist regimes (mainly in the past) and Salafist militants like ISIS, al-Qaeda, Boko Haram, and others (now). The destabilization of the Middle East over the past two decades has had
a devastating impact on the region's native Christian population.
In Iraq, a population that numbered more than a million in the 1990s dwindled to less than a third of that in the wake of the US-led invasion and removal of the secular government of Saddam Hussein. In Syria, under threat since 2011 by Salafist groups armed and funded by Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Turkey and other countries - the US shamefully included - Christians seemed to be facing a similar fate.
But lately there have been grounds for hope. Christmas is particularly joyful this year in Syria. Aleppo, Homs, and other cities liberated from years of oppression by jihadists had reason to celebrate - and the freedom to do so - care of the Syrian Arab Army and the Russian Air Force. Mosul in Iraq was cleared of ISIS fighters by US-led coalition. God willing, 2018 will see the freeing of other areas still under terrorist control.
Comment: The fascist ban of tobacco use in prisons hasn't gone well in the UK. As more prisons ban smoking, we are bound to hear more stories of violence like the ones listed below. Maybe that is exactly what the PTB want.