The Armenian Patriarchate of Istanbul has sent a note to the Turkish government and requested clarifications regarding the decision to expropriate the Armenian Sourp Giragos Armenian Church in Diyarbakir, Rober Hatechian, editor-in-chief of the Istanbul-based Marmara daily, told .
He added, however, that the Patriarchate has not received any explanation so far.
After years of struggle the Armenian St. Giragos Church was renovated and reopened in 2011, but has since been damaged in clashes between Turks and Kurds.
Hatechian said the national minorities are worried about the move, but donât believe the government will manage to expropriate all 6,300 plots of land âwith one shot.â
âThe properties, namely the Armenian St Giragos and St. Sarkis Churches will belong to the Armenian community, and I donât believe any state body will suddenly confiscate them.  I donât see the danger. But I think we have to wait for another couple of days for explanations from the government,â Hatechian said.
âWith this step Turkey showed that its policy is the same as it was 100 years ago,â historian Vahan Melikyan told reporters in Yerevan.
âThis is a serious threat to the dialogue between the Turkish, Kurdish and Armenian communities. This is a failure of an attempted dialogue between civil societies Turkey had imitated. Turkey behaves like a rightful heir of the Ottoman Empire,â he said.
Founding member of the National Council of Western Armenians Aragats Akhoyan accuses the Armenian Patriarchate of Istanbul. âThis is the consequence of the weakness of the Patriarchate and the policy of Acting Patriarch Aram Ateshyan.â