Jean-Clément Jeanbart said European countries have been targeting the
"backbone of our society", luring middle class Syrian Christians to
leave the country in hope of a better life.
"We've not only seen people leave, but also seen countries offering
them free flights and visas they've hardly asked for," he told Radio
Notre Dame. "They are taking the few remaining people...it is as if
there were a deportation."
On a visit to Paris, the Melkite Greek archbishop said that half of
the Christians in Aleppo, the largest city in Syria, had already left.
"It is the middle class, the backbone of our society, that is being absorbed," he said.
Without naming the states he was referring to, he said that this exodus they were perpetuating was detrimental to Syria.
"We think that leaving harms the country and the migrants themselves,
because they are dreaming of a better world, which could exist if there
are reforms in their own country," he said.
The situation is stable in Aleppo, he said, adding that Christians
are able to attend religious services more freely than before. He
credited this to President Bashar al-Assad's government: "We have no
problem practising our religion wherever the government is in control.
We have very good relations with the Muslims, who make up 80 per cent of
the population."
Education is stable in these government controlled areas, with Muslims and Christians attending school together, he said.
Although he said he was neither for nor against Assad, he said: "If
the regime collapses and the president leaves, there will be countless
local wars everywhere. People will kill each other. It will be terrib
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