UPDATE/FURTHER INFO: For those of our readers  who will be in the UK, Archbishop Vincent Nichols of Westminster,  president of the Bishops’ Conference of England and Wales, will preside  and preach at a remembrance service for the victims of the Baghdad  massacre, to be held at Westminster Cathedral on Friday, November 27. Catholic or not, do try to attend to protest and to show your support. 
After the horror of last weeks massacre  of 58 Iraqi Christians at a Baghdad church by a RoP mob, the exiled  Archbishop tells his flock it’s finally time to up sticks and begin an  exodus:
A senior Iraqi Christian is to call on believers to quit the country, after gunmen targeted a church in Baghdad.
Archbishop Athanasios Dawood, who is based in the UK, will make his  appeal during a service at the Syrian Orthodox Church in London.
The archbishop has previously criticised the lack of protection for Iraqi Christians.
At least 52 people died as security forces stormed a Catholic church in Baghdad to free dozens of hostages.
A number of gunmen entered Our Lady of Salvation in the city’s Karada  district during Mass on Sunday 31 October, sparking an hours-long  stand-off.
The militants made contact with the authorities by mobile phone,  demanding the release of al-Qaeda prisoners and also of a number of  Muslim women they insisted were being held prisoner by the Coptic Church  in Egypt.
After negotiations failed, Iraqi security forces stormed the  building, before the gunmen reportedly threw grenades and detonated  their suicide vests.
On Sunday, Archbishop Dawood is expected to advise all Christians to  leave Iraq now that al-Qaeda has warned of more attacks there.
The archbishop is also calling on the UK government to grant Christian Iraqis asylum.
Christians – as ethnic Assyrians – have lived in Iraq since the 1st  Century, but following the fall of Saddam Hussein, they have become  isolated and the Baghdad government has proved unwilling or unable to  protect them.
There has been a string of bomb attacks on churches leading many to flee to neighbouring countries.
Church leaders have in the past advised the faithful to stay in Iraq and strengthen their communities.
But such is the insecurity, there are signs this policy may be about to change.
“Fight those who believe not in God nor the Last Day,  nor hold that forbidden which hath been forbidden by God and His  Apostle, nor acknowledge the religion of Truth, (even if they are) of  the People of the Book, until they pay the Jizya with willing  submission, and feel themselves subdued”  Qur’an 9:29
Anyone who knows about Islam or reads publications such as  ours will be all too aware of the plight of Christians living in Muslim  lands. Sanctioned by Allah, non-Muslims in every Muslim-majority country  in the world face life as second-class citizens; with restrictions and  challenges ranging from low-level harassment to outright (and often  violent) persecution by both the state and their Muslim neighbours.
Humiliation kidnap, rape, violence, legal persecution and  other forms of hatred are rife and regular. Post-Saddam Iraq is one of  the worst examples possible. Christians here are a target for any  violent Islamist thug that feels the need for a little blood-letting. Or  a lot, as was the case last week.
This is no place for Christians. 
We fully support the Archbishop’s Dawood’s call for all  Christians to quit Iraq – and for them to be afforded asylum in Britain  and the West. Without the bloody sword of Islam over their heads, they  are sure to integrate well and lead peaceful, productive lives.
[Source: BBC News]