Two Archbishops Are Kidnapped Outside of Northern Syrian City
Malek Al Shemali/Reuters
By HANIA MOURTADA and RICK GLADSTONE
Published: April 22, 2013
BEIRUT, Lebanon — Two Syrian archbishops from Aleppo were abducted on
Monday while traveling outside that besieged northern city, the official
news media and antigovernment activists reported, making them the most
senior church clerics to become entangled as victims in the two-year-old
civil war.
Multimedia
Graphic
Follow @nytimesworld for international breaking news and headlines.
The government and insurgent groups blamed each other for the abduction
of the two clerics, the Syriac Orthodox archbishop, Yohanna Ibrahim, and
the Greek Orthodox archbishop, Paul Yazigi. Activists reached by
telephone in the Aleppo area said the pair’s vehicle had been waylaid in
the countryside by armed men who shot their driver.
Several prominent Muslim religious leaders have been persecuted or killed since the Syria
conflict began, including the highest-ranking Sunni imam in the country
in a bombing of his Damascus mosque last month. But until now the
fighting had largely bypassed the clerical hierarchy of Syria’s
Christian minority.
Archbishop Ibrahim had been supportive of President Bashar al-Assad
and had urged his followers not to abandon Syria, but he had recently
turned critical of the government. In an interview with the BBC on April
13, the archbishop said that perhaps a third of Syria’s Christians had
left the country and that he could not blame them, considering the
“difficult circumstances in terms of security and the threats they face
daily.”
In the same interview, the archbishop chided Mr. Assad’s government for “not dealing with the crisis in a better way.”
Archbishop Yazigi was not known to be politically outspoken.
Syria’s official news agency, SANA, said the pair had been engaged in
humanitarian work when they were seized in the village of Kfar Dael by
“terrorists,” the government’s catchall term for the armed opposition.
Antigovernment activists said the pair had been in southern Turkey
earlier Monday and had crossed back into Syria at the Bab al-Hawa
crossing, which is controlled by insurgent forces. Aleppo, which has
been a battleground of the insurgency since last summer, is about 40
miles south of the Turkish border.
The abduction of the clerics in northern Syria came as concern
intensified about border tensions in western Syria with Lebanon. A Human Rights Watch
report released Monday accused both the Syrian government and the
insurgency of striking residential areas in Lebanon on several occasions
and killing a number of its citizens. The cross-border attacks appeared
to be largely indiscriminate, Human Rights Watch said.
While the Syrian government and armed opposition groups have both said
that their attacks on Lebanese villages were in retaliation for
provocations, Human Rights Watch said it had not found any evidence of
military targets when it visited the Lebanese villages that had been
attacked. Its report said the evidence “strongly suggests these attacks
were indiscriminate and therefore violate the laws of war,” according to
a summary of the report on its Web site.
Lebanon has officially adopted a policy of dissociation from the Syrian
conflict, which has pitted President Assad’s Alawite minority against a
Sunni-dominated rebellion, but violence is beginning to spill over the
border, intensifying sectarian tensions in Lebanon.
Insurgents and their sympathizers have accused Hezbollah, the Lebanese
Shiite militant group that supports Mr. Assad, of sending fighters into
the Syrian town of Qusayr in recent weeks. On Sunday, rebel groups in
Qusayr threatened to “transfer the battle of blood into the heart of
Lebanon” because of what they called incitement by Hezbollah. Some rebel
fighters in Qusayr also sent a message via Skype to comrades beseeching
them to come and help defend against “the party of the devil” — a
disparaging reference to Hezbollah, which translates from Arabic as “the
party of God.”
Hezbollah has not commented on the Syrian rebels’ accusations, but it
has said that Lebanese citizens living inside Syria have been attacked
and that they have the right to defend themselves.
Anti-Assad activists also reported on Monday that the number of deaths
from an attack by government forces on a town south of Damascus had
risen to at least 101, mostly civilians, and could exceed 250 if the
missing remain unaccounted for, which would make the attack one of the
bloodiest since the conflict began two years ago.
The attack on the town, Jdeidet al-Fadel,
which happened over this past week, has been described by the Syrian
opposition as an intense campaign of shelling, burning and summary
executions, while the official news media has described it as a cleanup
operation against terrorists, an operation that had been welcomed by
area villagers.
In other Syria developments, the main anti-Assad group, the National
Coalition for Syrian Revolutionary and Opposition Forces, chose a
caretaker leader to replace Sheik Moaz al-Khatib until a formal election
is held. Sheik Moaz, a Sunni cleric, was temporarily succeeded by
George Sabra, a leftist Christian dissident and outspoken critic of Mr.
Assad.
No comments:
Post a Comment