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Syria Crisis: Nuns Freed By Rebels Arrive In Damascus

March 10, 2014 | Middle East
March 10, 2014
Middle EastSyria

ICC Note: A group of Syrian Nuns that had been detained by a Syrian jihadist group for more than three months has now been released. The nuns who were taken from a monastery in Maaloula Syria were released as part of a prisoner exchange with the Syrian government releasing 150 women that were being held. The nuns were released at a Lebanese border town and have since been escorted back to the Syrian capital of Damascus. The situation regarding the nuns had served to highlight the dire conditions confronting the country’s Christian population.
03/10/2014 Syria (BBC) – A group of Greek Orthodox nuns held for three months by rebels in Syria after being taken from their convent in Maaloula have arrived back in Damascus.
The nuns were brought to the Lebanese border town of Arsal early on Monday where they were handed over to Lebanese officials and then driven to Syria.
They said they were tired, but that they had been mostly well treated.
They were freed as part of a prisoner exchange involving some 150 women and children held by the Syrian government.
The deal was negotiated by officials from Qatar and Lebanon.
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The [al-Nusra] Front was good to us… but we took off our crosses because we were in the wrong place to wear them”
Mother Pelagia Sayyaf
The nuns and their attendants, exhausted but apparently well after their ordeal, were brought through a rebel border crossing to Arsal, a town the north-eastern Bekaa Valley, early on Monday.
They were then quickly taken to the nearby official border point and handed over to the Syrian authorities.
Damascus Governor Hafez Makhlouf was among the officials who greeted the nuns before they were driven to the Greek Orthodox patriarchate.
It is believed they were held by the al-Nusra Front, a jihadist rebel group affiliated to al-Qaeda.
Mother Pelagia Sayyaf, head of the Mar Takla monastery in Maaloula, said the nuns had been treated well.
“God did not leave us,” she told reporters. “The [al-Nusra] Front was good to us… but we took off our crosses because we were in the wrong place to wear them.”

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