Photo: Delil Souleiman/ AFP
Ishtartv.com - www.rudaw.net
Julian Bechocha
ERBIL, Kurdistan Region - The next Syrian constitution must guarantee
the rights of the Syriac and Assyrian Christian minorities as the communities
face an uncertain future with an Islamist group now in power, a party leader
said on Saturday.
“These are requests at a national level. Syriacs and Assyrians do not have any
rights as stipulated by the Syrian constitution and the previous regimes that
governed Syria,” Sanharib Barsoum, co-chair of the Syriac Union Party, told
Rudaw. “In the next Syrian constitution, there must be a role given to these
people to run the country.”
He stressed that Christians must be allowed to celebrate their culture and
rights, and the Syriac language must be officially recognized.
Hay’at Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), which led the rebel offensive that toppled Bashar
al-Assad, is a one-time al-Qaeda offshoot and an internationally proscribed
terror organization. There are concerns that it may seek to impose Islamic law
though the new authorities have tried to reassure Syrians and the international
community that they will respect all minorities.
The caretaker prime minister, Mohammed al-Bashir, told Italian daily Corriere
della Sera this week that the new Syrian state will “guarantee the rights of
all people and all communities in Syria.”
Barsoum said that while HTS has not approached them for meetings through
official channels, their treatment of Syria’s minorities has so far been
“acceptable and good.”
“The situation for Christians in general at the beginning was scary and these fears
still exist for many Christians in Aleppo and Damascus,” he added.
The Syriac Union Party is affiliated with the Kurdish administration in
northeast Syria (Rojava). It holds three seats in the Rojava government and has
its own police force, named Sutoro (security in Syriac).
Talks will soon begin with relevant parties regarding the formation of the new
government in Damascus, according to Barsoum, who called for “a greater
presence of Syriac Christians” in the transition period.
“In the near future, there will be a delegation to Damascus,” he said, with the
Syriac Union Party being part of both a Kurdish-led administration delegation
and a “special delegation” of Christians in Syria.
Assyrian and Syriac Christians in Syria have faced persecution for decades.
Before the start of the Syrian civil war in 2011, Assyrians made up around
30,000 of the 1.2 million Christians in Syria, but attacks by the Islamic State
(ISIS) and Turkish-backed militants have pushed the community to the brink of
extinction in the country.
The fertile Assyrian region along the Khabur River was attacked in 2014 by ISIS
militants who kidnapped at least 220 Assyrian Christians before releasing them
in small groups for ransom.
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