Monday,
Armenian Opposition Gears Up For ‘Big Rally’
• Gayane Saribekian
• Robert Zargarian
Armenia - Opposition members and supporters led by deputy parliament speaker
Ishkhan Saghatelian (center) march through Yerevan, .
Armenia’s leading opposition alliances began on Monday coordinated small-scale
demonstrations in Yerevan in preparation for mass protests aimed at toppling
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian.
Senior members of the Hayastan alliance again pledged to thwart what they say
are sweeping concessions to Azerbaijan planned by Pashinian as they led several
hundred supporters on an “awareness march” through the city’s northern Arabkir
district.
Earlier in the day, a group of Hayastan activists blocked Arabkir’s main
thoroughfare, Komitas Avenue, before being detained by riot police.
Several others headed to Yerevan on foot from Pashinian’s hometown, Ijevan. The
opposition bloc headed by former President Robert Kocharian promised similar
marches to the Armenian capital from three other parts of the country.
“Every day we will be organizing various protests, marches and demonstrations in
Yerevan,” Hayastan’s Ishkhan Saghatelian told reporters.
“Our goal is to get our people all over Armenia to rise up over the next five
days,” he said, adding that the opposition has scheduled its first “big rally”
for Sunday.
“We have come out for a decisive fight,” said Anna Grigorian, another lawmaker
representing the bloc. She charged that Pashinian and his political team are
“ready to see Karabakh as a part of Azerbaijan.”
Meanwhile, Artur Vanetsian, a leader of the Pativ Unem alliance, led a similar
march through the city center. Vanetsian and a group of his loyalists had begun
a nonstop sit-in in Liberty Square on April 17.
Armenia - Opposition leader Artur Vanetsian (right) and his supporters protest
in Yerevan, .
Vanetsian said on Monday morning that he has succeeded in attracting public
attention and that the opposition can now switch to the “second phase” of its
“decentralized” campaign.
Pativ Unem and Hayastan jointly rallied thousands of supporters in Liberty
Square on April 5 to warn Pashinian against agreeing to restore Azerbaijan’s
control over Nagorno-Karabakh. The prime minister met with Azerbaijani President
Ilham Aliyev in Brussels the following day for talks hosted by European Council
President Charles Michel.
Speaking in the parliament on April 13, Pashinian said the international
community is pressing Armenia to scale back its demands on Karabakh’s status and
recognize Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity. He signaled Yerevan’s intention to
make such concessions to Baku.
Some pro-government lawmakers insisted afterwards that Pashinian did not call
for the restoration of Azerbaijani control of Karabakh.
Karabakh Leader ‘Reassured’ By Pashinian
Armenia - Prime Minsiter Nikol Pashian meets with Karabakh President Arayik
Harutyunian, Yerevan, July 9, 2021
Nagorno-Karabakh’s leader said on Monday Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian has
assured him that Armenia will not back any agreements on the territory’s status
unacceptable to the Karabakh Armenians.
Addressing the Armenian parliament on April 13, Pashinian said that the
international community is pressing Armenia to “lower a bit the bar on the
question of Nagorno-Karabakh’s status” and recognize Azerbaijan’s territorial
integrity. He signaled Yerevan’s intention to make such concessions to Baku.
The speech welcomed by the United States and the European Union stoked Armenian
opposition allegations that Pashinian has agreed to Azerbaijani control over
Karabakh.
Karabakh’s ethnic Armenian leadership openly deplored it. In a resolution
unanimously approved by its members, the Karabakh parliament demanded that the
Armenian authorities “abandon their current disastrous position.”
Arayik Harutiunian, the Karabakh president, again commented on the issue at a
meeting with other officials in Stepanakert. Harutiunian was quoted by his press
office as telling them that “no document on the status of Artsakh (Karabakh) is
being discussed at this stage.”
He announced a “clear agreement with the prime minister of Armenia to the effect
that in case of any discussion on the future status of Artsakh at the
international level the position of the Armenian side must be agreed with the
opinion of the Republic of Artsakh’s authorities and people.”
Pashinian insisted on Friday that his administration has no plans to “surrender”
Karabakh through a peace deal with Azerbaijan. But he again did not specify
Karabakh’s status acceptable to Yerevan in the current circumstances. He
attacked his political opponents instead, saying that a tougher line advocated
by them would lead to another war with Azerbaijan and a complete loss of
Karabakh.
Armenia Plans New Nuclear Plant
• Sargis Harutyunyan
Armenia - A general view of the Metsamor nuclear plant, 12May2011.
Armenia has revived plans to build a new nuclear plant and is already
cooperating with Russia for that purpose, a senior Armenian official said on
Monday.
Deputy Minister of Territorial Administration and Infrastructures Hakob
Vartanian told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service that a joint task force formed by the
Armenian and Russian governments will explore ways of implementing the ambitious
project.
“The working group has already held the first meeting,” he said. “Right now we
are working on a feasibility study, and yes, we are going to build a new
[nuclear] energy block.”
Roughly 40 percent of Armenia’s electricity is currently generated by the
nuclear power station at Metsamor. Its sole functioning reactor went into
service in 1980 and was due to be decommissioned by 2017. Armenia’s former
government decided to extend the life of the 420-megawatt reactor after failing
to attract billions of dollars in funding for the construction of a new and
safer nuclear facility.
In 2015, the Russian government provided Yerevan with a $270 million loan and a
$30 million grant for major safety upgrades at Metsamor. Russian and Armenian
specialists essentially completed the modernization last year. Armenian
officials say the Soviet-built plant located 35 kilometers west of Yerevan is
safe enough to operate until 2036.
Vartanian indicated that the new plant would be built in time for the planned
decommissioning of the Metsamor reactor. He said the cost of the project depends
on the plant’s design capacity which is due to be recommended by the
Russian-Armenian task force.
The Russian side, the official went on, has already floated the idea of building
multiple and smaller reactors in Armenia.
“But I’m not sure that we will opt for building small modular energy blocks,” he
said, arguing that small reactors are not necessarily more cost-effective than
large ones.
Armenia, Azerbaijan To Start Talks On Border Demarcation
• Naira Nalbandian
ARMENIA -- Azerbaijani (L) and Armenian checkpoints at the Sotk gold mine on the
Armenian-Azerbaijani border, Gegharkunik province, June 18, 2021
Armenia and Azerbaijan have agreed to start negotiations on delimiting and
demarcating their long border, the Armenian Foreign Ministry announced on Monday.
The ministry said Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan and his Azerbaijani
counterpart Jeyhun Bayramov reached the agreement in what was their second phone
call in two weeks. The two sides will soon hold a “meeting regarding the
commission” on border demarcation, it said without giving any dates.
According to the ministry’s readout of the phone call, Mirzoyan and Bayramov
also discussed preparations for separate negotiations on an Armenian-Azerbaijani
peace treaty.
Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev said, meanwhile, that he has already
appointed Azerbaijani negotiators two will discuss the treaty and border
demarcation with their Armenian counterparts.
It was not clear whether Yerevan has also named members of its two negotiating
teams. The Armenian government could not be reached for comment.
Aliyev and Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian first agreed to form such a commission
during their trilateral meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin last
November. However, it was not set up in the following months not least because
of confidence-building measures demanded by Yerevan.
Aliyev and Pashinian pledged to form the commission before the end of this month
during their April 6 talks in Brussels hosted by European Council President
Charles Michel. The latter said they also plan to “move rapidly” towards
negotiating the peace treaty.
Russian responded by accusing the European Union and the United States of trying
to hijack Russian efforts to broker peace between Armenia and Azerbaijan as part
of the ongoing geopolitical standoff over Ukraine.
In a joint declaration issued after their April 19 talks, Pashinian and Russian
President Vladimir Putin reaffirmed Moscow’s key role in the peace process. They
said they will speed up the planned creation of the border demarcation
commission.
“We are ready to provide advisory assistance to the bilateral Commission on
border delimitation, to provide the necessary cartographic materials,” a senior
Russian Foreign Ministry, Denis Gonchar, told the RIA Novosti news agency in an
interview published on Monday.
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2022 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
Author: Emil Lazarian
A group of YSMU students boycott classes indefinitely
Doctor Haykaz Harutyunyan, a member of the Nikol Aghbalyan Student Union of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF), and a group of students of the Yerevan State Medical University (YSMU) on Monday announced an indefinite boycott of classes amid the “worsening security situation in Armenia and Artsakh”, the union said in a statement.
They raised the Artsakh flag over the university building and urged their fellow students to join the strike.
The representative of ARF “Nikol Aghbalyan” student union board, Dr. Haykaz Harutyunyan and a group of YSSU students raised the flag of the Republic of Artsakh at the Mkhitar Heratsi Medical University and, calling on the students to join the boycott, announced an indefinite strike due to the deteriorating security conditions in Armenia and Artsakh.
#ՀՅԴ_ՆԱՈՒՄ
#զարթնիրլաո
#զարթնիրուսանող
Artsakh STEM Expo to be held in Martakert
ArmInfo. On May 8, the Artsakh STEM Expo (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) scientific festival will be held in the city of Martakert of the Republic of Artsakh, which main goals are raise the motivation and interest of young people in STEM subjects, encourage to open new STEM Educational centers in Artsakh and develop tourism. The festival will be held under the slogan “Dreams become reality when you realize an idea”.
According to the head of the Artsakh STEM Expo program Artavazd Boyajyan, the event will be organized in 3 stages. As part of the first part, according to him, an exhibition will be held, which will present products and solutions of representatives of science and engineering.
The second part includes STEM-TALK discussions, during which leading experts will present their success stories, share their experience, talk about the possibilities of the field, professions, etc. In particular, STEM- TALK speakers will be representatives of scientific and business groups working in the field of science, technology, engineering and mathematics, including YEREVANN Laboratory Director Hrant Khachatryan, Deputy Head of the Artsakh Science Center Arev Israelyan, Diego Portales University Postgraduate Tatevik Mkrtchyan and others.
A competition program will be held within the framework of the last list of events. According to Boyajyan, young people aged 15 to 25 who live or work in Artsakh can take part in the competition, and they must submit innovative ideas in STEM areas. Of the 10 pre-selected, the jury will select the 3 most promising. The winning teams will be provided with mentoring support to turn the presented developments into a startup that will further interest investors. Next year, according to the head of the program, students from Armenia can also apply for participation in the competition.
The ‘G-word’: Legislators’ Fundamental Role to Defend Liberal Democracy | Opinion
ecognition of the Armenian genocide is not only about the Armenians or upsetting the Turks. The “G-word” is about the fundamental role of parliaments and legislators to protect liberal democracy.
The United Nations Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide defines genocide in Article II as acts committed with the “intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group.” While genocide recognition is a political, diplomatic and legal framework, it is also an academic and normative one. The 107th Armenian genocide Memorial Day is approaching on April 24. According to the U.N. Convention, the genocide of 1915 affected the lives of not only Armenians but also Assyrians and Greeks under Ottoman rule. Over 1.5 million of the declining Ottoman Empire’s historic Christian population were murdered.
During the current war in Ukraine, Russia has committed crimes against humanity. President Joe Biden called for a war-crimes trial, and even went as far as labeling those crimes as “genocide.” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky makes frequent references to the Holocaust and draws similarities between the current atrocities against the Ukrainian people and the European Jews. Meanwhile, the public statements of some observants, such as Josep Borrell, European Union foreign affairs chief, asserted that the war in Ukraine is “among the darkest hours of Europe since the Second World War.” It goes to show that the genocide and ethnic cleansing of Bosnian and Kosovo Muslims is still largely denied or dismissed from the West’s public memory. This also shows the extent to which partisan positions on genocide recognition are driven by ethnic/religious identity politics.
Too often, the lines between governments and parliaments are blurred. They ultimately are separate agencies within the state apparatus of each country. As such, governments usually adopt a more pragmatic approach to normative issues, namely the commemoration and recognition of a genocide. This is not a huge surprise. Governments have to conduct foreign relations, which sometimes involves doing business with authoritarian leaders while maintaining national security interests.
Rather unexpectedly, parliaments and legislators usually mirror and adopt the pragmatic approach of the executive branches and miss important opportunities to make a difference. Yet, parliaments and legislators should implement a more normative approach to these issues. Such recognition enhances the importance of protecting minorities and promotes human rights. It bolsters democracy and stabilizes checks and balances. More importantly, recognition of genocides does not have to be all or nothing. Governments and ministries of foreign affairs can say “no,” while parliaments and legislators can say “yes, it’s a genocide.”
Since 1975, numerous efforts were made in the U.S. Congress to pass an Armenian genocide bill. In a milestone vote in late 2019, both the U.S. House and Senate defied pressure from Turkey and passed a bill declaring that the killing of 1.5 million Armenians by the Ottoman Turks was, in fact, a genocide.
Demonstrators march toward the Turkish Consulate during a rally commemorating the 103rd anniversary of the Armenian genocide on April 24, 2018, in Los Angeles, Calif.MARIO TAMA/GETTY IMAGES
As expected, the Trump administration rejected Congress’ vote on the Armenian genocide. “The position of the administration has not changed,” said then-State Department spokesperson Morgan Ortagus in December 2019. “Our views are reflected in the president’s definitive statement on this issue from last April.” To recap, in April 2018, on the 103th anniversary of the Armenian genocide, Donald Trump noted that the U.S. paid tribute to the victims of “one of the worst mass atrocities of the 20th century.” The word genocide was not mentioned by Trump in 2018 and 2019. Like previous presidents, he too omitted the G-word.
In 2021, during the 106th anniversary of the genocide, Joe Biden adopted the United States’ Congress decision and stated, “Over the decades Armenian immigrants have enriched the United States in countless ways, but they have never forgotten the tragic history that brought so many of their ancestors to our shores. We honor their story.” Biden has provided Armenian survivors not only recognition of the 1915 genocide but also publicly acknowledged an important identity component of Armenian immigrants.
The U.K.’s longstanding position of successive governments supporting the denial account of Turkey is yet another important example. Since 2021, the British Parliament has been challenging this long-held position by passing the Armenian genocide bill, which will be read a second time on May 6, 2022, in the House of Commons. Certainly, the road to final recognition has a few important steps, but every step counts. As an important normative step, the U.K. should adopt a balanced stance on this issue.
If the U.K. parliament recognizes the Armenian genocide in May, it could be a wake-up call for New Zealand and Australian parliaments (the U.K.’s former dominions) that have not surprisingly aligned with the U.K.’s non-recognition policy for many years.
Ultimately, it is imperative that public debate focuses on the normative realm and parliaments, as they are major players in the genocide debate. The new global order imposed by the war in Ukraine emphasizes the deterioration of liberal democracies, as well as the emergence of a new bipolar order. Parliaments in the liberal camp should use their authority more often when it comes to the G-word. Legislators also have a fundamental responsibility to defend liberal democracy by highlighting its normative voice of the term genocide. Given the current state of the Russian invasion of Ukraine and the crimes against humanity, it is recommended that normative recognition of war crimes as genocide should not be delayed any further.
Dr. Eldad Ben-Aharon is a scholar of international relations. He is a lecturer in Middle Eastern studies at the University of Groningen and a Postdoctoral Minerva Fellow at the Institute for Peace and Conflict Research in Frankfurt (PRIF). Dr. Ben-Aharon’s first book Israeli-Turkish Relations at the End of the Cold War: The Geopolitics of Denying the Armenian Genocide will be published in 2023 by the University of Edinburgh. His Twitter is: @EldadBenAharon.
The views expressed in this article are the writer’s own.
Armenian Envoy To India Denounces 1915 Genocide; Says People Still Waiting For Justice
Calling the Armenian genocide “The Sin of Ottoman Empire”, the Armenian ambassador to India again raised the voice for the millions of people who were killed around a century ago. Armenian ambassador Yuri Babakhanian, while speaking at a book launch event on Sunday, April 24, reiterated his demand to sue the country responsible for the mass killing of Armenians in 1915. He said the victims are still waiting for justice. Notably, the strong condemnation from Babakhanian came when he was speaking at the book launch of the “Armenian Genocide, The Sin of Ottoman Empire”.
The Armenian genocide was considered the systematic destruction of the Armenian people and identity in the Ottoman Empire during World War I. It was estimated that more than 1.5 million Armenians were killed during the First World War.
“…More than a century has passed since the Armenian Genocide, the deprivation of the Armenian people of their homeland and property. However, the entire Armenian people are still waiting for justice because the crime of genocide cannot have a statute of limitations,” he said. According to Yuri Babakhanian, if the first genocide of the 20th century had been recognized and condemned by the then world leaders, there would have been no subsequent genocide at all.
Babakhanian called the genocide– “a terrible tragedy”, and added about half of the Armenians lost their homeland and their family members during the mass killings. “It is also the history of survival and struggle,” he said and added, “It was a fight in the name of life, struggle to preserve identity, struggle not to lose the memory of the nation, and the right and the opportunity to pass it on to the next generations.” He appealed to the other countries to condemn the genocide and urged the world leaders to get united in the matter in order to prevent such incidents in the future. As of now, around 33 countries including, the United States, Germany, France, Italy, Canada, Uruguay and Brazil, formally recognized the Armenian Genocide.
Interestingly, Russia, which has escalated the brutal war against its neighbouring country, Ukraine, also recognised the incident as “genocide”.On the other hand, Turkey acknowledges that many died in that period, but it says that the death toll is inflated. It considers the deaths resulting from civil unrest. According to the Turkish government, Muslim Turks were also killed. On Sunday, US President Joe Biden also condemned the incident and used the anniversary to appeal to the leaders to lay down a set of principles for foreign policy against genocide. In a reply, Turkey’s Foreign Ministry issued a counter-statement saying, “Statements that are incompatible with historical facts and international law regarding the events of 1915 are not valid.”
Turkiye rejects US’ commemoration of 107th anniversary of ‘Armenian genocide’
The Turkish Foreign Ministry yesterday rejected US President Joe Biden’s commemoration of the 107th anniversary of the Armenian genocide when 1.5 million Armenians were killed in World War I during the era of the Ottoman Empire.
“We reject such statements and decisions to distort historical facts for political motives, and we condemn those who insist on this mistake,” the Turkish Foreign Ministry said in a statement, adding that Biden has repeated the same mistake he made last year.
Yesterday Biden commemorated the 107th anniversary of the start of the Armenian genocide, issuing a statement in memory of the 1.5 million Armenians “who were deported, massacred or marched to their deaths in a campaign of extermination”.
Last year, Biden recognised the massacres committed against the Armenians as a “genocide”, angering Turkiye.
At the time, the Turkish Foreign Ministry said: “We reject and denounce in the strongest terms the statement of the President of the US regarding the events of 1915 made under the pressure of radical Armenian circles and anti-Turkey groups.”
Historians believe about 1.5 million Armenians were victims of systematic killing during the era of the Ottoman Empire.
Turkiye, the legal successor to the Ottoman Empire, has recognised the killing of between 300,000 and 500,000 people, but refuses to describe it as “genocide”.
Tatoyan: Current Armenian authorities have lost their legitimacy
The incumbent Armenian authorities have lost their legitimacy in issues concerning the security of Armenia and Artsakh, former Ombudsman Arman Tatoyan claims.
“Their current policies contradict the manifesto they unveiled at the 2021 parliamentary elections,” he wrote on Facebook on Friday.
“It is clear that they would not have formed a government if their program had been based on the current policies (concessions to Azerbaijan, unlawful reinforcement of the Azerbaijani military near Armenian villages and roads, significant weakening of Armenia’s positions in the international arena, and the like).
“The authorities have misled citizens, gained votes and are pursuing a policy against the will of the people,” Tatoyan said.
“An anti-democratic process is taking place, undermining the source of the government’s legitimacy,” he added.
Azerbaijan urges quick peace deal with Armenia but states firm line
April 22 (Reuters) – Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev called on Friday for negotiations to take place soon on a peace treaty with Armenia, but said Yerevan would need to renounce any territorial claim against his country, the Interfax news agency reported.
Aliyev said the two former Soviet republics, which fought their last major war in 2020, could reach an agreement quickly if Armenia accepted the principles his country had set forward.
“Armenia must officially recognise the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan, as well as the fact that it does not have any territorial claims against Azerbaijan, and will not have any in the future either,” he was quoted as saying.
Otherwise, “we will not recognise the territorial integrity of Armenia, we will announce it officially,” he said.
Speaking to Armenia’s parliament after Aliyev’s comments, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said he would not sign any peace deal with Azerbaijan without consulting ethnic Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh.
At least 6,500 people were killed in a six-week war in 2020, the latest flare-up of a conflict dating back to the collapse of the Soviet Union. It ended when Russia intervened and sent peacekeepers to the flashpoint region of Nagorno-Karabakh, which lies inside Azerbaijan but was home to an estimated 150,000 Armenians before the latest round of fighting.
RIA news agency quoted Pashinyan as saying: “I rule out that I would come close to signing a document that would not have undergone extensive public discussion, including with all the layers of society in Nagorno-Karabakh.”
“This is a cast-iron guarantee that the fate of Nagorno-Karabakh cannot be decided behind the backs of the people.”
Azerbaijan is in a strong negotiating position after emerging as the decisive victor, recapturing territory it had lost between 1991 and 1994. But many questions remain unresolved, including over the demarcation of borders.
The despatch of almost 2,000 peacekeepers reaffirmed Moscow’s role as policeman and chief power broker in a volatile part of the former Soviet Union where Turkey also wields increasing influence thanks to its close alliance with Azerbaijan.
Azerbaijani press: Construction of new highway bypassing liberated Lachin underway [PHOTO/VIDEO]
The construction of a new 32-km-long highway bypassing Azerbaijan’s liberated Lachin city is underway, the State Agency for Automobile Roads reported on April 21.
Under the project, the carriageway will be 7 meters wide, the roadbed will be 12 meters, and the shoulder sections will be equal to 5 meters in total (2×2.5), the report added.
The construction of the roadbed, as well as artificial facilities is underway, the state agency underlined.
Unsuitable soil and vegetation are being excavated in accordance with the “Construction Norms and Standards” in order to expand the roadbed. Special equipment is being used to widen and profile the road, and a new landfill is being constructed.
The construction of circular pipes and various artificial structures is also underway to ensure the transfer of water along the road, which passes through difficult terrain.
In this regard, the construction of a 139.5-m-long 4-span bridge on the 22nd km of the road is nearing completion.
The new highway is being built in accordance with the established timetable and technological sequence under the supervision of the State Agency for Automobile Roads.
The necessary forces have been mobilized in the area in order to finish the construction work this year.
One of the most important aspects of Azerbaijan’s Karabakh rehabilitation plan is the reconstruction of road infrastructure.
All roads in the territory of the Karabakh and East Zangazur economic regions are designed to bypass large settlements, ensuring the comfort of both residents and road users.
The construction of a new route bypassing Lachin was agreed upon in a trilateral agreement signed on November 10, 2020, by the Azerbaijani, Armenian, and Russian leaders following Azerbaijan’s victory in a 44-day war over Armenia. The new road was conceived as an alternative to the Lachin corridor, which connects Karabakh with Armenia and is controlled by Russian peacekeepers temporarily stationed in Azerbaijan’s Karabakh region.
Turkish press: Christians in Syria’s Idlib worship freely: Archpriest
IDLIB, Syria
Christians in Syria’s northwestern Idlib province have been performing their religious duties freely, said Hanna Celluf, the archpriest of Qunayah Church.
Speaking to Anadolu Agency, Celluf said: “No one disturbs us while we are performing our prayers. No one harasses us. We don’t come across any adverse condition while carrying out our activities in the church.”
The 70-year-old Franciscan has been serving as an archpriest for Qunayah Church for 21 years.
Qunayah Church, which was built in the 5th century in the village of Qunayah, is located in a mountainous and green area, and several historical artifacts are also preserved in the church.
Now, only around 210 Christians in Idlib gather and worship at the church in Jisr al-Shughur district due to the civil war that broke out in 2011.
Celluf said that before the civil war, the Christian population of Qunayah, Yacubiyeh and Jdayde villages used to be around 10,000 and Syrian Christians lived mainly in the Aleppo, Idlib, Damascus, Hama and Jazira regions.
But due to the war, most Christians had to leave the country or were internally displaced.
Christians living in areas under the control of military opposition groups in Idlib are among the most ancient inhabitants of the region, although they are in a minority.
While the number of Christians in Idlib exceeded 10,000 before the civil war, it has dropped to 600 due to the attacks of Bashar Assad regime forces and the Daesh/ISIS terror group.
“Occasionally, (Christian) families living in other provinces of Syria return to their homes. We welcome them,” Celluf said.
‘Brotherly love between us’
“In general, our relations with people are excellent. There is a brotherly love between us. I hope those who left their homes will return to their families and lands so that we can live in love and peace,” he went on to say.
In response to a question on why he didn’t leave Idlib, the archpriest said: “No one abandons their roots. Because the Christians took root in Antakya. Our roots have stood firm since then. Our ancestors and families lived here. We will live here until we die.”
He noted that there are many Christians in the region from the Armenian Church of Dhok and the Greek Orthodox, Protestant and Latin Catholic churches.
“As the Catholic Church, we are no different from other sects. We do our prayers together. We live together, we commiserate with each other,” he said, adding, “There is no difference between us as Greek, Orthodox or Armenian. We all worship the one God and the one Christ.”
Expressing his honor to serve the Christians in Idlib as a Christian of the Franciscan Priests of the Guardianship of the Holy Land, Celluf said that Pope Francis, the spiritual leader of the Catholic world, wrote a letter to them.
“The Pope wrote us a letter of encouragement to continue our lives and sacrifices by living with the people here,” he said.
He said the Pope encouraged them to give hope to the Christians living in Idlib, writing in his letter that one day peace will come to these lands.
Thanking everyone who helped them so that they can live in safety and peace, he said: “We have hope that the unity of these lands will be restored under the supervision of the UN, Turkiye and other countries.”