{"id":15376,"date":"2014-07-22T14:46:56","date_gmt":"2014-07-22T14:46:56","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.aaeurop.com\/?p=15376"},"modified":"2014-07-22T14:46:56","modified_gmt":"2014-07-22T14:46:56","slug":"facing-fines-conversion-or-death-christian-families-flee-mosul","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.aaeurop.com\/?p=15376","title":{"rendered":"Facing fines, conversion or death, Christian families flee Mosul"},"content":{"rendered":"
Baghdad, Iraq (CNN)<\/strong> — Just days after the militant group the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria said they killed hundreds of Syrians, dozens of Iraqi Christian families are now fleeing the ISIS-controlled city of Mosul, hoping to avoid a similar fate.<\/p>\n On Friday, the al Qaeda splinter group issued an ultimatum to Iraqi Christians living in Mosul — by Saturday at noon (5 a.m. ET), they must convert to Islam, pay a fine or face “death by the sword.”<\/p>\n A total of 52 Christian families left the city of Mosul early Saturday morning, with an armed group prohibiting some of them from taking anything but the clothes on their backs.<\/p>\n “They told us, ‘You to leave all of your money, gold, jewelry and go out with only the clothes on you,'” Wadie Salim told CNN.<\/p>\n Images obtained exclusively by CNN show that the phrase “property of ISIS” scrawled in black paint on a number of the homes that were abandoned.<\/p>\n Some of the families headed for Irbil — which is currently controlled by Kurdish forces — and others toward the Dohuk province. The majority went to Dohuk, which is 140 kilometers (87 miles) north of Mosul.<\/p>\n “We did not know how to act,” said another Mosul resident, Um Nazik. “Are we going to get killed?”<\/p>\n ISIS was able to take over large swaths of land due to the lack of centralized authority in both Iraq and war-torn Syria. The Sunni militants hope to establish an Islamic state throughout the region it currently controls.<\/p>\n Salman al-Farisi, the ISIS-appointed governor of Mosul, declared that any family that planned to on staying in Mosul and not to converting to Islam would be required to pay 550,000 Iraqi dinar (about $470).<\/p>\n Letters distributed to Christians in Mosul in recent days said ISIS’s leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, agreed to allow those who didn’t embrace Islam or pay a special jizyatax to leave.<\/p>\n ISIS is notorious for its brutality — the group is so violent that al Qaeda has attempted to distance itself from its former affiliate.<\/p>\n On Thursday in Syria’s Homs province, the militant Sunni group killed 270 people after storming and seizing the Shaer gas field, the group said.<\/p>\n