Syrian Orthodox and Syrian Catholics Appeal for Aid In Hassake, Eastern Syria

HASSAKE, January 17, 2013 (Zenit.org) – A new report from Fides News
Agency stated that the people Hassake, the capital of Mesopotamia located in
Eastern Syria is suffering tremendously from cold weather, lack of fuel and
water, and limited electricity. According to the report, over 25,000 Christians
(Syrian Orthodox, Syrian Catholics, and Chaldean Armenians) have crowded the
city, mainly seeking refuge from the ongoing conflict. Many have sent messages to
Fides asking for aid.

Two months ago, an appeal was made by three regional Bishops who
“launched an SOS to avoid catastrophe.”  The Bishops stated that
“nothing has been done: no one cares for the exhausted population of
Hassake, who urgently need humanitarian aid.”

Syrian Catholic Bishop Jacques Behnan Hindo and Syrian Orthodox
Bishop Matta Roham are intensifying efforts to contact other Christian Syrian
leaders and humanitarian organizations, but the response they have received so
far has been minimal. “It is impossible to bring aid to Hassake because it
is too dangerous and lacks minimal security conditions,” the Bishops
stated.

Islamist groups and terrorists have occupied several areas of the
region and have mposed several checkpoints on the roads. The “Jubhat el
Nosra” militants were recently added by the United States to the black
list of “terrorist groups”. The area has also been overrun by common
criminals who commit robbery, kidnapping, looting, even in the city. The
population “is slowly dying, left to itself,” Fr. Ibrahim, a
Christian priest resident in Hassake told Fides.

“The people are hungry and living in fear,” he
continued. “Every day, at 3 o’clock in the afternoon, there is a sort of
curfew, because armed groups roam the streets. This is followed by kidnappings,
sometimes with ransom demands, not always. In recent days, two brothers of the
Bashr family and two young members of the Fram family were killed at point
blank range on the street. Young Christians are threatened and terrified, 90% have
fled the city. If young people leave, what will our churches be needed for?

Georgius, a Christian university student whose family is in
Hassake and has taken refuge in Lebanan told Fides that the “Jubhat el
Nosra” militants have specifically targeted youth born between 1990 and
1992.

“They look for them, accuse them of being soldiers for the national
service and kill them cold-bloodedly. They want to terrorize young people to
prevent them from enlisting.”

The population of Hassaké are weary and tired. Georgius also
stated that he fears a final assault on the city will “cause the
definitive exodus of Christians from Hassake.”