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Kidnapped Priest Freed In Turkey

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  • Kidnapped Priest Freed In Turkey

    KIDNAPPED PRIEST FREED IN TURKEY
    by Peter Lamprecht

    Journal Chretien
    http://www.spcm.org/Journal/spip.php?brev e4072
    Nov 30 2007
    France

    Motive for abduction of Syrian Orthodox clergyman remains uncertain.

    A Syrian Orthodox priest kidnapped in southeastern Turkey Wednesday
    (November 28) walked free from his captors this afternoon, a church
    source said.

    Father Edip Daniel Savci, 42, was released around noon in the city
    of Batman , 70 kilometers (43 miles) north of Midyat, where he was
    kidnapped.

    "He called us himself and gave us the news," Yuhannan Gulten of Syrian
    Orthodox Mor Gabriel Monastery south of Midyat told Compass.

    "We immediately called the police, and they went to get him."

    Gulten said that the priest's captors had set him free without outside
    intervention. He was unable to answer questions about Savci's health,
    the identity of his kidnappers or whether a ransom was paid.

    "All we know is that the security forces are accompanying him here,
    and we expect him within half and hour," Gulten said.

    Conservative Haber7.com news website claimed that Savci's captors
    had also been captured but did not give further details.

    The kidnappers had demanded 300,000 euros (US$443,720) in exchange
    for the priest's release when they contacted a fellow clergyman from
    Savci's mobile telephone soon after the abduction.

    Batman Gov. Vekili Aziz Mercan said that Savci had been released in
    the city center and telephoned Mor Gabriel monastery from a business
    in Batman's Sirinevler neighborhood, according to CNN Turk website.

    The website reported that Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
    telephoned Mor Gabriel Monastery to congratulate the monks on the
    priest's release.

    It remains unclear why unidentified assailants first abducted and
    then released the hard-working priest, who took care of 12 children
    at his monastery and doubled as the village repairman.

    Though the incident appears to have been done for money, the current
    anti- Chris tian atmosphere in Turkey may have influenced the
    kidnappers, columnist Murat Belge wrote today.

    "At least society will look at it as a 'partial good work' [if I
    kidnap a Chris tian] - that's an advantage," the writer for daily
    Radikal said, in an attempt to simulate the kidnapper's reasoning.

    He commented that the words, "be smart" which reportedly preceded
    the captor's demand for ransom in a text message sent on November 28,
    were an indication of an anti- Chris tian motive.

    The phrase alludes to Yasin Hayal, one of the men charged with planning
    the death of Armenian journalist Hrant Dink in January. As Hayal was
    brought to an Istanbul courtroom in January, he shouted an apparent
    threat to Nobel laureate Orhan Pamuk, "Orhan Pamuk, be smart ! Be
    smart!"

    Violent attacks against Chris tians in Turkey have been on the rise
    in recent years.

    In February 2006, a young Turkish teenager shot and killed a Catholic
    priest in the northern port city of Trabzon . Last week saw the opening
    hearing of the trial of five young men who tortured and murdered
    three Protestants at a Chris tian publishing house in Malatya in April.
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