Chaldean cardinal says promised US aid for Iraq hasn't come

USAID administrator at Vatican for talks, announces a near doubling of funding

(FILES) This file photo taken on March 14, 2018 shows a view of destruction surrounding the Roman Catholic Church of Our Lady of the Hour (L) in the old city of Mosul, eight months after it was retaken by Iraqi government forces from the control of Islamic State (IS) group fighters. An exhibition opens at the Institute of the Arab World (IMA) in Paris showing the "millennia cities" resuscitated by the miracle of 3D, from Mosul to Aleppo. / AFP / AHMAD AL-RUBAYE
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The head of Iraq's Chaldean Catholic Church said on Tuesday that promised US aid for religious minorities in Iraq hasn't materialised, issuing an unusual public rebuke of the United States on the same day Washington announced a new infusion of assistance.

Cardinal Louis Raphael I Sako spoke at a Vatican briefing as Mark Green, USAID administrator, was at the Vatican for talks and announced a near doubling of funding — to about $300 million since last year — and on-the-ground results.

"There are promises, but the reality is that there's been nothing up to now," Mr Sako said, when asked about the US aid. "Today, we need to help and encourage Christians to remain in place, help them to find work, repair their homes, give them a hope. Emptying these places is a mortal sin, truly."

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He praised Hungary by contrast, saying it had provided $5 million in direct assistance to repair Christian homes, schools and churches in Iraq and Syria rather than take refugees in.

Mr Sako was asked, in a follow-up question, if he was referring to complaints about missing aid from US Catholic charities or the US government.

"I am speaking about the policy of America," he said. "Americans, they are very nice and very friendly as individuals, but the policy is wrong."

It wasn't immediately clear if he was referring to the US policy overall in the region, but he suggested that the US invasion of Iraq, which gave way to years of instability that facilitated the birth of ISIS was responsible for the exodus of Iraqi Christians from communities that have existed since the time of Jesus.

"We Christians of the Middle East, if we leave, we will have lost our identities, our tradition, our patrimony which is very, very rich," he said. "But America, up to now, hasn't done anything. But we hope."

Separately, USAID Mr Green was starting his visit to the Vatican, and the US State Department said a new infusion of $178 million had been allocated to help religious minorities in Iraq.

Mr Green has a previously scheduled meeting with Mr Sako on Wednesday. The USAID administrator expects to discuss the agency's work to help religious minorities in Iraq with the cardinal including ongoing projects with the Chaldean church and Mr Sako's diocese.

Mr Green said US funds were being channeled through 36 local, 11 faith-based and 27 international organisations to help preserve Iraqi culture, prevent future atrocities and help with economic recovery. Specifically, the US is working with the Catholic group Knights of Columbus to identify those in need.

In a statement, Mr Green said one concrete example of US funds at work was in the town of Bashiqa in Iraq's Nineveh Plains, where funds have helped repair homes and wells, financed medical units and increased security around schools to enable families to return.