For Iraqi Christians, pope’s visit was a rare moment of hope

Pope Francis looks on while seated on the podium at the square near the ruins of the Syriac Catholic Church of the Immaculate Conception, in the old city of Iraq's northern Mosul on March 7, 2021. (AFP)
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Updated 22 April 2025
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For Iraqi Christians, pope’s visit was a rare moment of hope

  • His 2021 visit to Iraq, the first ever by a pope, came after years of conflict and displacement

BAGHDAD: The death of Pope Francis has sent shockwaves through Iraq’s Christian community, where his presence once brought hope after one of the darkest chapters in the country’s recent history.

His 2021 visit to Iraq, the first ever by a pope, came after years of conflict and displacement. Just a few years before that, many Iraqi Christians had fled their homes as Daesh militants swept across the country.

Christian communities in Iraq, once numbering over a million, had already been reduced to a fraction of their former number by decades of conflict and mass emigration.

In Mosul, the site of some of the fiercest battles between Iraqi security forces and Daesh, Chaldean Archbishop Najeeb Moussa Michaeel recalled the pope’s visit to the battle-scarred city at a time when many visitors were still afraid to come as a moment of joy, “like a wedding for the people of Mosul.”

“He broke this barrier and stood firm in the devastated city of Mosul, proclaiming a message of love, brotherhood, and peaceful coexistence,” Michaeel said.

As Francis delivered a speech in the city’s Al-Midan area, which had been almost completely reduced to rubble, the archbishop said, he saw tears falling from the pope’s eyes.

Sa’dullah Rassam, who was among the Christians who fled from Mosul in 2014 in the face of the Daesh offensive, was also crying as he watched the pope leave the church in Midan that day.

Rassam had spent years displaced in Irbil, the seat of northern Iraq’s semiautonomous Kurdish region, but was among the first Christians to return to Mosul, where he lives in a small house next to the church that Francis had visited.

As the pope’s convoy was leaving the church, Rassam stood outside watching.

“It was the best day of my life,” Rassam said. 


Yemen expresses appreciation for Saudi Arabia’s role in supporting country’s security

President of the Yemeni Presidential Leadership Council Rashad Al-Alimi. (SABANEW)
Updated 31 December 2025
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Yemen expresses appreciation for Saudi Arabia’s role in supporting country’s security

  • The statement came after the Coalition to Support Legitimacy in Yemen carried out a “limited airstrike” on an Emirati shipment at Al-Mukalla port

RIYADH: Yemen’s foreign ministry expressed appreciation on Wednesday for the “pivotal and responsible role” of Saudi Arabia in supporting the security and stability of Yemen and the region.

The statement came after the Coalition to Support Legitimacy in Yemen carried out a “limited airstrike” on an Emirati shipment at Al-Mukalla port. The coalition said it had information that such weapons would be transported and distributed to locations in Hadramaut.

The ministry also welcomed the statements issued by other friendly countries and regional and international organizations, which affirmed their full support for the unity, sovereignty, and territorial integrity of Yemen.

The ministry also appreciated the countries’ commitment to strengthening regional security, emphasizing that such positions reflect solidarity with Yemen in facing current challenges.