ishtartv.com-
praguepost.com
Published:
28 July 2015
Written
by Czech News Agency
Group
seeks approval of list of names, is ready to cover costs
Prague,
July 28 (ČTK) — The Generace 21 foundation wants to bring 152 Christian
refugees from Iraq who have been persecuted by the Islamic State militants to
the Czech Republic, it handed their list to the Government Office and it only
needs the approval of Czech authorities, its representatives said today.
In
February, people from the Czech foundation talked to Prime Minister Bohuslav
Sobotka about the plan. “The meeting gave us the feeling that this project may
succeed,” the foundation's head Jan Talafant said.
The
foundation is ready to cover the costs of the transfer of the refugees to the
Czech Republic and the first year of their stay in the country. It can provide
accommodation for all the refugees who would be integrated into Czech society,
its representatives said.
They
said further persecuted Christians from Iraq could come to live in the Czech
Republic if this transfer is successful.
Jan
Dezort, one of the organizers of the project, said it has not been clear yet
whether the 152 Iraqi Christians could be included among the refugees whom the
Czech Republic promised to accept from Middle East refugee camps within the
plans that the European Union agreed on.
“The
list includes families who lost their homes and husbands who lost their jobs,
and family members were killed in some cases,” Dezort said about the Iraqi
Christians who might settle in the CzechRepublic.
One
of the applicants is Rania who is living in a refugee camp with her three
children and whose husband, a police officer, was killed by a bomb planted by
Islamic State when he guarded a hospital gate.
Many
children witnessed Islamists killing people and many of the Christians received
death threats.
The
applicants for resettlement are whole families or widows with children. Most of
them are young people ready to settle, study and work in the Czech Republic,
half of the men are university graduates or have higher education and the life
stories of all the applicants are known, Dezort said.
“A
genocide of Christians is going on in Iraq and we cannot just be passively
watching,” he said.
“These
people have no future (in their homeland) and they can never get out of there.
We will either get them out of the hell or they will die,” said Dan Drapal,
another initiator of the project.
Generace
21 handed the list of applicants to the Government Office on July 23. The
foundation needs to receive the approval of the government and the Interior
Ministry to launch the project. As soon as they get it, they would start with
the transfer of the applicants, its organizers said.
Polish
authorities managed to approve a plan for accepting 1,500 Christian refugees in
several weeks, the foundation said.
The
International Children's Cross, a Czech humanitarian group, called on the Czech
state to accept orphans, pregnant women and mothers with babies from Middle
East refugee camps.
The
group’s head Taťjana Horáková said the country should accept 50 orphans and a
similar number of women from Syria who would raise these children.