Popular anger against U.S.-sanctioned human rights abuser Rayan al-Kildani has grown in the two months since the wedding hall fire in the Nineveh Plains, casting a shadow over his election hopes.
Popular anger against U.S.-sanctioned human rights abuser Rayan al-Kildani has grown in the two months since the September 26, 2023 wedding hall fire in the Christian town of Baghdeda (Qaraqosh), capital of the Hamdaniya District in the Nineveh Plains. The fire killed 134 persons and set in motion an intensified struggle for control of the district. Local Christians believe that the owner of the wedding hall is an affiliate of Rayan al-Kildani and his brother Osama al-Kildani, the founder and present commander of Kataib Babiliyoun (50th brigade of the Popular Mobilization Forces or PMF). The attempted removal of the district administrator Issam Behnam and six other Christian officials is viewed locally as an opportunistic move by the Kildani brothers to exploit the tragedy to both excuse the real culprits and to remove Christian opponents of the Kildanis and Kataib Babiliyoun. This kind of purge of local Christians – replaced with Muslim officials – was previously undertaken by PMF militias in the neighboring Tel Keif district.
Kildani and his fake-Christian militia – largely manned by southern Iraqi Muslims – may now face the same wave of popular anger over public safety that followed the 2019 Mosul ferry sinking. The wedding fire attracted national attention, and Iraqis across the country came to Qaraqosh to mourn during the number of mass funerals and mourning ceremonies, including both the Iraqi Prime Minister and President. A number of incidents from these days of mourning highlight popular Christian frustration and refutation of the Babylon Brigade.
These instances of public anger from a traditionally quietest community, in the face of violent intimidation, highlights the level of desperation that local Christians feel in light of the wedding fire tragedy and the ongoing efforts by the Kildanis and Kataib Babiliyoun to diminish the Christian clergy (most notably Cardinal Louis Sako) and seize Christian properties. On November 28, the Iraqi churches even declared that the would not hold Christmas festivities due to both the war in the Holy Land and the Baghdeda fire. Christians are also preparing a boycott of the December provincial elections. When Kildani's party wins the Christian seat on the Nineveh provincial council - which is almost inevitable due to the coming boycott combined with Kataib Babiliyoun vote-buying - local Christian communities will hope to attract international commentary on the boycott and the non-representative results of the local elections.