Putin Aide Says Jerusalem Old City Property Dispute is at Top of Russian Agenda

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov says he expects Israel to aid in custody transfer of Alexander’s Courtyard to Moscow, after recent court decision set back move.

TOI

People walk outside the Alexander Nevsky Church in Jerusalem's Old City, on January 20, 2020. (Olivier Fitoussi/Flash90)

People walk outside the Alexander Nevsky Church in Jerusalem’s Old City, on January 20, 2020. (Olivier Fitoussi/Flash90)

A top aide to Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Tuesday that the transfer of church property in Jerusalem’s Old City to Moscow’s hands is at the top of the Israeli-Russian diplomatic agenda.

“The topic of Alexander’s Courtyard has long been at the top of the agenda of Russian-Israeli relations,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters, a day after Hebrew media reported that Putin had sent a letter to Prime Minister Naftali Bennett demanding that the property be handed over.

“We expect the Israeli leadership to assist us in order to complete the process as is necessary,” Peskov added.

Moscow has for years been seeking to secure the Alexander’s Courtyard church compound, but a recent court decision set back its plans by nullifying recognition of its claims to the complex, located near the Church of the Holy Sepulchre.

Officials in Jerusalem are worried the subject could exacerbate tensions with Russia, already on the rise over its invasion of Ukraine.

Bennett has been criticized for showing deference to Russia vis-a-vis Ukraine, refusing to send weapons and refraining from blaming Moscow for alleged atrocities. The moves are thought to be aimed at keeping Russia from targeting Israeli planes on bombing runs over Syria. Foreign Minister Yair Lapid, meanwhile, has been more vocally critical of Russia, and Israel has voted against Moscow at the UN several times lately.

Last month, the Jerusalem District Court annulled a decision giving the Russian government control of Alexander’s Courtyard.

The verdict was given following a petition by the Orthodox Palestine Society of the Holy Land, which owned the property until last year.

In 1859, Czar Alexander II purchased the land on which Alexander’s Court — also known as the Alexander Nevsky Church — was built. Until the Russian Revolution of 1917, the area was under the control of the Russian Imperial government.

Former prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu approved giving Alexander’s Courtyard to Russia in 2020. The move was seen as a goodwill gesture following Russia’s release of Naama Issachar, a young Israeli woman who was imprisoned after a small quantity of marijuana was found in her backpack during a layover in Moscow.

After the Russian government was registered as the rightful owner of the church, the Land Registry Commissioner responded to a string of appeals against the move, explaining that the Russian Federation had been recognized by international bodies and by the State of Israel as a “continuing state” of the Russian Empire.

In his decision on the appeal, Judge Mordechai Kaduri ruled that since Netanyahu had designated Alexander’s Courtyard as a “holy site,” the only body able to decide on the matter is the Israeli government, given various religious and political considerations.

Bennett set up a panel on the issue last July, but it has yet to convene.

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April 20, 2022 | 5 Comments »

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5 Comments / 5 Comments

  1. Jerusalem court cancels Russian government’s ownership of Old City Courtyard
    The court decision comes at a sensitive time as international pressure has risen on Russia over its invasion of Ukraine.
    March 3, 2022 / JNS) The Jerusalem District Court canceled the transfer of ownership of Alexander’s Courtyard in Jerusalem to the Russian government.

    The ruling came after an appeal by the Orthodox Palestine Society of the Holy Land that had owned the church until it was transferred to the Russian government last year, reported Globes.

    The court decision comes at a sensitive time as international pressure has risen on Russia over its invasion of Ukraine.

    Judge Mordechai Kaduri ruled that since former prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu established the highly sensitive property near the Church of the Holy Sepulcher in the Old City as a holy site, it is the Israeli government that should decide the issue, not the court.

    According to the report, the issue now is up to Prime Minister Naftali Bennett.

    https://www.jns.org/jerusalem-court-cancels-russian-governments-ownership-of-old-city-courtyard/

  2. @ REUVENI and Green Robot-

    Why do you two, obviously 100% Zionist and Jews, talk about “Palestinians” There are NO Palestinians. There are YESHA Arabs from Jordan Egypt Syria and further afield even from Europe. The are illegally in our Land, and are merely infiltrators.

    By calling them what the call themselves, a newly invented name, you support and aid them, which I’m sure you don’t want to do.

    So THINK ABOUT IT>

  3. Another Palestinian Squatter Claim. Just like all Palestinian Claims. Give the church and property to the Russian government. Do the right thing.

  4. What does Israel get in return? The Palestinians will demand that Alexander’s Courtyard be turned over to them and then that claim can be dealt with by the supreme court, turning the whole issue into a mess.
    Since the Russians have been encouraging the Palestinians to continue their mini-intifada, there is no viable solution EXCEPT to keep that piece of real-estate for now. I guess it will become more difficult to curb the Iranians in Syria.