Hem
Naftali Bennett och Vladimir Putin i Sochi i oktober 2021. (Evgeny Biyatov / AP)

Putin försöker få kontroll över kyrka i Jerusalem

Den ryske presidenten Vladimir Putin försöker få kontroll över en kyrkobyggnad i den gamla staden i Jerusalem, precis intill Jesu gravkyrka.

Bakgrunden är att den så kallade Alexander Nevskij-kyrkan ägts av exilryska intressen sedan ryska revolutionen 1917. Under senare år har Putin försökt lägga beslag på kyrkan. En möjlighet uppkom när den israeliska kvinnan Naama Issachar greps i Moskva år 2019, misstänkt för knarksmuggling. Vladimir Putin benådade kvinnan. Enligt inofficiella uppgifter skedde det i utbyte mot israeliska löften om kontroll över Alexander Nevskij-kyrkan.

Sedan en israelisk domstol lagt hinder ivägen för ett överförande av kyrkan till rysk kontroll har nu Putin skrivit ett brev till Israels premiärminister Naftali Bennett med begäran att processen ska påskyndas, uppger tidningen Haaretz.

 
Naama Issachar-affären (engelska)
Wikipedia (en)
In April 2019 in Sheremetyevo International Airport, Russian authorities arrested Israeli-American Naama Issachar (Hebrew: נעמה יששכר), a transit passenger flying from India to Israel, for alleged drug smuggling after some 10 grams of marijuana or hashish were found in her bag during a stopover in Moscow. On 11 October 2019 a Russian court sentenced her to seven and a half years in prison on drug possession and smuggling charges. Issachar's family and Israeli officials said that Russia told them she would be released if Aleksey Burkov (Russian: Алексей Бурков), a Russian national pending extradition from Israel to the United States on suspicion of committing cyber crimes, was released to Russia. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu subsequently personally requested from Russian President Vladimir Putin a pardon for Issachar, which Putin said he would consider. Israel's High Court ultimately rejected Burkov's appeal against his extradition, leading Russia to condemn the decision as "a breach ... of Israel's international obligations", stating that the decision "does not contribute to the development of [Russian-Israeli] relations". On 19 October 2019 rallies were held in Tel Aviv and in New York City calling for Issachar's release. Billboards were put up in Israel calling on Putin to "please bring Naama home."In December 2019, the Israeli Justice Ministry transferred the historical Alexander courtyard in Jerusalem to the Russian Imperial Orthodox Palestine Society, which many commentators linked to negotiating Issachar’s release. On 29 January 2020 President Putin signed her pardon. Her attorney previously noted that no convicted foreigner was ever pardoned by a Russian President before.
Omni är politiskt obundna och oberoende. Vi strävar efter att ge fler perspektiv på nyheterna. Har du frågor eller synpunkter kring vår rapportering? Kontakta redaktionen