Three injured in Iraq when an axe-wielding man attacks an Assyrian Christian new year parade

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Assyrian revellers dressed in traditional clothing march during “Aketo,” the Assyrian New Year celebrations in Iraq’s northern city of Dohuk on Apr. 1, 2025. (AFP)
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Screengrab taken from a video that went viral showing participants in an annual parade by Assyrian Christians in Iraq’s city of Dohuk pinning to the ground, the assailant who was repeatedly shouting, “Daesh, the Daesh remains.” (X/@Sea2Sea1Way)
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Updated 01 April 2025
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Three injured in Iraq when an axe-wielding man attacks an Assyrian Christian new year parade

  • Witnesses said the attacker, who has not been officially identified, ran toward the crowd shouting Islamic slogans
  • He struck three people with the axe before being stopped by participants and security forces

IRBIL: The annual parade by Assyrian Christians in the Iraqi city of Dohuk to mark their new year was marred Tuesday when an axe-wielding man attacked the procession and wounded three people, witnesses and local officials said.
The parade, held every year on April 1, drew thousands of Assyrians from Iraq and across the diaspora, who marched through Dohuk in northern Iraq waving Assyrian flags and wearing colorful traditional clothes.
Witnesses said the attacker, who has not been officially identified, ran toward the crowd shouting Islamic slogans.
He struck three people with the axe before being stopped by participants and security forces. Videos circulated online showed him pinned to the ground, repeatedly shouting, “Daesh, the Daesh remains.”
The victims included a 17-year-old boy and a 75-year-old woman, both of whom suffered skull fractures. A member of the local security forces, who was operating a surveillance drone, was also injured. All three were hospitalized, local security officials said.
At the hospital where her 17-year-old son Fardi was being treated after suffering a skull injury in the attack, Athraa Abdullah told The Associated Press that her son had come with his friends in buses. He was sending photos from the celebrations shortly before his friends called to say he had been attacked, she said.
Abdullah, whose family was displaced when Daesh militants swept into their area in 2014, said, “We were already attacked and displaced by Daesh, and today we faced a terrorist attack at a place we came to for shelter.”
Janet Aprem Odisho, whose 75-year-old mother Yoniyah Khoshaba was among the wounded, said she and her mother were shopping near the parade when the attack happened.
“He was running at us with an axe,” she said. “All I remember is that he hit my mother, and I ran away when she fell. He had already attacked a young man who was bleeding in the street, then he tried to attack more people.”
Her family, originally from Baghdad, was also displaced by past violence and now lives in Ain Baqre village near the town of Alqosh.
Assyrians faced a wave of hate speech and offensive comments on social media following the incident.
Ninab Yousif Toma, a political bureau member of the Assyrian Democratic Movement (ADM), condemned the regional government in northern Iraq’s semi-autonomous Kurdish region and Iraqi federal authorities to address extremist indoctrination.
“We request both governments to review the religious and education curriculums that plant hate in people’s heads and encourage ethnic and religious extremism,” he said. “This was obviously an inhumane terrorist attack.”
However, he said that the Assyrian community had celebrated their new year, known as Akitu, in Duhok since the 1990s without incidents of violence and acknowledged the support of local Kurdish Muslim residents.
“The Kurds in Duhok serve us water and candy even when they are fasting for Ramadan. This was likely an individual, unplanned attack, and it will not scare our people,” he said, adding that the community was waiting for the results of the official investigation and planned to file an official lawsuit.
“The Middle East is governed by religion, and as minorities, we suffer double because we are both ethnically and religiously different from the majority,” he said. “But we have a cause, and we marched today to show that we have existed here for thousands of years. This attack will not stop our people.”
Despite the attack, Assyrians continued the celebrations of the holiday, which symbolizes renewal and rebirth in Assyrian culture as well as resilience and continuous existence as an indigenous group.
At one point, as the injured teenager was rushed to the hospital, some participants wrapped his head in an Assyrian flag, which was later lifted again in the parade— stained with blood but held high as a symbol of resilience.


Efforts to heal Syria’s ‘deep divisions’ arduous but ‘not insurmountable,’ UN chief says on anniversary of Assad’s fall

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Efforts to heal Syria’s ‘deep divisions’ arduous but ‘not insurmountable,’ UN chief says on anniversary of Assad’s fall

  • Antonio Guterres hails ‘end of a decades-old system of repression,’ Syrians’ ‘resilience and courage’— Transition offers opportunity to ‘forge a nation where every Syrian can live securely, equally, and with dignity’

NEW YORK: Efforts to heal Syria’s “deep divisions” will be long and arduous but the challenges ahead are “not insurmountable,” UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said on Sunday as he marked the first anniversary of the fall of the Assad regime.

A surprise offensive by a coalition of rebel forces led by Hayat Tahrir al-Sham and allied militias rapidly swept through regime-held areas in late November 2024. Within days, they seized key cities and ultimately captured the capital Damascus.

On Dec. 8 last year, as regime defenses collapsed almost overnight, then-President Bashar Assad fled the Syrian Arab Republic, ending more than 50 years of brutal rule by his family.

“Today marks one year since the fall of the Assad government and the end of a decades-old system of repression,” Guterres said, praising the “resilience and courage” of Syrians “who never stopped nurturing hope despite enduring unimaginable hardship.”

He added that the anniversary was both a moment of reflection on the sacrifices made in pursuit of “historic change,” and a reminder of the difficult path ahead for the country.

“What lies ahead is far more than a political transition; it is the chance to rebuild shattered communities and heal deep divisions,” he said, adding that the transition offers an opportunity to “forge a nation where every Syrian — regardless of ethnicity, religion, gender or political affiliation — can live securely, equally, and with dignity.”

Guterres stressed that the UN will continue supporting Syrians as they shape new political and civic institutions.

“The challenges are significant, but not insurmountable,” he said. “The past year has shown that meaningful change is possible when Syrians are empowered and supported in driving their own transition.”

He added that communities across the country are building new governance structures, and that “Syrian women continue to lead the charge for their rights, justice, and equality.”

Though humanitarian needs remain “immense,” he pointed to progress in restoring services, widening aid access, and creating conditions for the return of refugees and displaced people.

Transitional justice efforts are under way, he added, alongside broader civic engagement. Guterres urged governments to stand firmly behind a “Syrian-led, Syrian-owned transition,” saying support must include respect for sovereignty, removal of barriers to reconstruction, and robust funding for humanitarian and economic recovery.

“On this anniversary, we stand united in purpose — to build a foundation of peace and prosperity and renew our pledge to a free, sovereign, united, and inclusive Syria,” he added.