1 | Tens of thousands of Yazidis and Christians have fled for their lives after IS declared a caliphate in parts of Iraq and Syria. |
2 | Amman: Islamic State militants have captured dozens of Christian families after snatching the regime-held Syrian town of Qaryatain. |
3 | The extremist group are said by observers to have seized entire families from churches and houses on Wednesday as they gained control after taking three checkpoints in suicide attacks. |
4 | As many as 230 people are missing, including followers of the Syriac Orthodox or Syriac Catholic churches. |
5 | Rased News Network, a Facebook page affiliated with Islamic State militants, published this picture showing a militant on a tank captured from Syrian forces in Qaryatain. |
6 | Bishop Matta al-Khoury, secretary of the Syriac Orthodox Patriarchate in Damascus, said ISIS had used a number of kidnapped residents as human shields against regime air strikes. |
7 | Qaryatain, south-west of the ancient city of Palmyra, had a pre-war population of 18,000, including Sunni Muslims and 2000 Syriac Catholics and Orthodox Christians. |
8 | Bishop al-Khoury said about 180 Christians were in the town when IS seized control. |
9 | Islamic State militants carry weapons as they battle against Syrian government forces in Qaryatain in a photo released by Rased News Network on Facebook. |
10 | The extremists have been targeting the minority Christian community as it spreads its tendrils through war-torn Syria. |
11 | In areas where IS and the al-Qaeda-linked Nusra Front have seized control, churches have been destroyed, crosses smashed, and in some cases, residents have been forced to pay the "jiyza", a religious tax. |
12 | The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a monitoring group, said many of Qaryatain's Christians had already fled south from Aleppo, seeking refuge in the town. |
13 | Archbishop Bashar Matti Warda, of Erbil, Iraq, left, and Archbishop Jean-Clement Jeanbart, of Aleppo, Syria, speak at a news conference on Tuesday about the plight of persecuted Middle Eastern Christians. |
14 | Those abducted were wanted by IS for "collaborating with the regime" and their names were on a list used by the jihadists as they swept through the town, it said. |
15 | Forty-five women and 19 children are among those missing. |
16 | About 45 regime soldiers were killed during the militants' "combing operations" in hills that lie west of the city, a pro-IS agency said. |
17 | In the nearby government-controlled city of Homs, churches have been overwhelmed as hundreds of people seek sanctuary from the violence in Qaryatain. |
18 | "They need immediate aid," said Nuri Kino, head of the activist group A Demand For Action. |
19 | "You never get used to hearing from the priests or the bishops. There is fear in their voices, they are pleading to the world and no one is listening." |
20 | The capture of Qaryatain brings IS within 40 kilometres of the strategic Damascus-Homs highway, which acts as the main supply artery connecting the capital to central Syria and the coastal provinces of Tartous and Latakia. |
21 | It also affords the group potential access to the Qalamoun area, an important mountain range that has been a vital corridor for Syrian rebels into neighbouring Lebanon. |
22 | Amnesty International called for the release of detainees. |
23 | "The abhorrent abduction in Syria of more than 200 people by Islamic State highlights the dreadful plight of civilians caught up in the conflict in the country," Neil , Amnesty International's Syria researcher, said in a statement on Friday. |
24 | The international human rights organisation called on Islamic State to "respect the rules of war and immediately release those civilians unharmed". |