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Kremlin to Address Holy Sepulchre Church Row

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The Russian presidential administration will thoroughly study a request for help from Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Jerusalem Theophilos III over problems the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem is facing, President Vladimir Putin’s spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.

MOSCOW, November 4 (RIA Novosti) - The Russian presidential administration will thoroughly study a request for help from Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Jerusalem Theophilos III over problems the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem is facing, President Vladimir Putin’s spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.

Peskov told the Moscow-based Ekho Moskvy radio on Saturday that Moscow will not remain indifferent to the request in Theophilos’s letter he sent to the Russian leader.

The Church of the Holy Sepulchre has threatened to close its doors to pilgrims and tourists as its bank account has been frozen over an accumulated debt for water supplies.

The church, which has been for centuries one of the most important pilgrimage destinations for millions of Christians as the purported site of the crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus Christ, is now unable to pay salaries to its extensive staff of priests, monks and teachers.

“If nothing changes we intend to announce within a few days, for the first time in centuries, that the Church of the Holy Sepulchre is closed,” Theophilos III said on Friday.

Theophilos III wrote letters to the leaders of Russia, Israel, the United States, Greece, Cyprus and Jordan with an appeal to intervene with the standoff and put a stop “to this flagrant act against the church.”

The church was exempt from water charges in a tacit agreement with Jerusalem authorities for decades but the Hagihon company, which took over water supply to Jerusalem in the late 1990s, has recently demanded payment of a 9-million-shekel ($2.3 million) bill dating back 15 years, including interest.

The company insists that the Israeli laws do not exempt any party from water charges and other religious institutions in Jerusalem pay their bills on a regular basis.

Hagihon first sent a bill to the church for 3.7 million shekels (about $950,000 at current rates) in 2004. Church officials then thought the bill was sent by mistake, and the company did not make further steps pressing for payment.

Now Hagihon has demanded payment of the bill, which has risen to 9 million shekels including interest.

The church says it is willing to pay for future utilities but has asked Hagihon to write off the accumulated debt as it was the result of an original misunderstanding.

The Greek Orthodox Patriarchate of Jerusalem shares control of the church with the Armenian Orthodox Patriarchate and the Roman Catholic Franciscan Order through complicated arrangements essentially unchanged for centuries.

The site, located within the Christian Quarter of the walled Old City of Jerusalem, attracts more than 1 million pilgrims annually.

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