Assyrian Christians kidnapped by ISIS inch closer to freedom

A group of kidnapped Christians in Syria might be closer to freedom after ISIS lowered its demands for their release.

The ransom price for 230 Assyrian believers, who were captured by ISIS in February, has been significantly lowered after it became clear their community could not afford ISIS' demands.

"In the first attempted contact through intermediaries there was talk of an exorbitant request, amounting to $23million to free the Christian prisoners," Syrian Catholic Archbishop Jacques Behnan Hindo told Fides News Agency. This amounted to about $100,000 per hostage.

ISIS is now demanding much less, Hindo added. The difficulty is no longer money, he explained, but the logistics of organising their freedom.

"Now the biggest obstacle regarding the release of our Assyrian brothers is no longer money, but the difficulty of how to organize the phase of liberation," the Catholic Archbishop said.

"Four buses would be needed to release the hostages from the place of their seizure to get them back to Hassaké and avoid any danger of attacks. In any case, it would be a delicate operation, which in some way should be agreed with the Syrian army forces and Kurdish militias, so that everything proceeds smoothly."

It is suspected the Assyrians, who were kidnapped in raids on their villages in the Khabur river valley, are held in ISIS' al-Shaddadi stronghold.

As many as 15,000 Assyrian Christian families are facing danger from ISIS and the ongoing civil war in Syria, one source estimated.

related articles
Pope Francis to kidnapped Assyrian Christians: \'We don\'t forget you\'
Pope Francis to kidnapped Assyrian Christians: 'We don't forget you'

Pope Francis to kidnapped Assyrian Christians: 'We don't forget you'

Kidnapped Assyrian Christians: Four more hostages released by Islamic State
Kidnapped Assyrian Christians: Four more hostages released by Islamic State

Kidnapped Assyrian Christians: Four more hostages released by Islamic State

News
King Charles attends historic prayer service with Pope in Sistine Chapel
King Charles attends historic prayer service with Pope in Sistine Chapel

King Charles held an audience with Pope Leo XIV at the Vatican on Thursday where they also both took part in a historic ecumenical prayer service in the Sistine Chapel. 

Pastor suffers traumatic brain injury after torture in Kyrgyzstan prison
Pastor suffers traumatic brain injury after torture in Kyrgyzstan prison

A pastor who has been tortured in a prison in Kyrgyzstan, according to U.N. special rapporteurs, has since suffered traumatic brain injuries that have left him cognitively impaired, according to Forum 18, a news site dedicated to reporting human rights and religious freedom violations worldwide. 

Bishops join calls for end to two child benefit cap
Bishops join calls for end to two child benefit cap

The Church of England has long opposed the scheme.

The Australian Christian Lobby warns against ‘dangerous’ cult laws in Victoria
The Australian Christian Lobby warns against ‘dangerous’ cult laws in Victoria

The Australian Christian Lobby (ACL) has voiced strong opposition to potential new Victorian laws designed to protect people from coercive control within cults, arguing that such measures could inadvertently target legitimate faith communities.