Abducted priest freed

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By John Pontifex
IRAQI priest Father Dhiya Aziz is safe and recovering after two weeks in captivity in Syria, according to fellow Franciscans in Aleppo.
The priest, who was released late yesterday (Monday, 4th January), is reported to have suffered extreme cold while he was being held and when freed was in a state of severe exhaustion.
No other details have emerged about his condition.
Speaking to Aid to the Church in Need today (Tuesday), Fr Aziz’s fellow Franciscans in Aleppo, northern Syria, said they had yet to establish if he had been tortured but that the priority now was sleep and rest.
Fr Aziz’s disappearance was announced after he failed to return to his parish in Syria’s Idlib province on 23rd December.
The priest had set off from the Syrian city of Lattakia, aiming to arrive in his parish before Christmas.
The Franciscan had been returning from a visit to Turkey where he was visiting family who had fled from Qaraqosh, northern Iraq, seized by militant Islamic group Daesh (ISIS) in August 2014.
Aid to the Church in Need Middle East projects coordinator Father Andrzej Halemba said that Fr Aziz was now recovering at an undisclosed location.
“The Franciscans told me that in this Year of Mercy they were giving thanks to |God for showing his mercy through the release of Fr Aziz.
“We are just so grateful to God that Fr Aziz has been freed.”
Fr Halemba said the identity of Fr Aziz’s kidnappers was as yet unknown.
He added: “It is not quite clear yet what Fr Aziz’s state of health is.”
Fr Halemba explained that Fr Aziz has a pre-existing back condition dating back to an earlier kidnapping in July and a planned operation on his spine will now be rescheduled.
The Custody of the Holy Land, the region’s Franciscan authority, announced Fr Aziz’s release late last night but added that, “due to confidentiality reasons”, no further details could be given about how he came to be freed.
Fr Aziz was kidnapped on 4th July 2015 by militants in Yacoubieh and released after five days.
Fr Aziz is the latest in a series of clergy to be kidnapped in Syria.
Among those still missing are Archbishops Boulos Yazigi and Yohanna Ibrahim of Aleppo, kidnapped in April 2013 and Jesuit priest Father Paolo Dall’Oglio, abducted three months later.

Editor’s Notes

www.acnuk.org

Directly under the Holy See, Aid to the Church in Need supports the faithful wherever they are persecuted, oppressed or in pastoral need. ACN is a Catholic charity – helping to bring Christ to the world through prayer, information and action.

Founded in 1947 by Fr Werenfried van Straaten, whom St John Paul II named “An outstanding Apostle of Charity”, the organisation is now at work in more than 140 countries throughout the world.

The charity undertakes thousands of projects every year including providing transport for clergy and lay Church workers, construction of church buildings, funding for priests and nuns and help to train seminarians. Since the initiative’s launch in 1979, Aid to the Church in Need’s Child’s Bible – God Speaks to his Children has been translated into 176 languages and more than 51 million copies have been distributed all over the world.

Aid to the Church in Need UK is a registered charity in England and Wales (1097984) and Scotland (SC040748). ACN’s UK office is in Sutton, Surrey and there is a Scottish office in Motherwell, near Glasgow.

For more information, contact John Pontifex, ACN UK Head of Press and Information, 020 8661 5161 or Clare Creegan, Digital Media and Press Officer on 020 8661 5175.

John Pontifex
Head of Press & Information
Direct dial: 020 8661 5161

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