Construction firm pulls lawsuit to evict synagogue in Uzbekistan

After international outcry, Absolute Business Trade ends legal efforts to force Jewish house of prayer to vacate building in order to build luxury apartments

Cnaan Liphshiz is The Times of Israel's Jewish World reporter

The Ashkenazi Synagogue of Tashkent, Uzbekistan. (Courtesy of L'Chaim via JTA)
The Ashkenazi Synagogue of Tashkent, Uzbekistan. (Courtesy of L'Chaim via JTA)

JTA — A construction firm in the Central Asian republic of Uzbekistan withdrew a lawsuit that aimed to evict a synagogue to make way for apartment buildings.

Absolute Business Trade ended its legal efforts last week amid an international outcry over its fight to have the Beth Menachem Ashkenazi synagogue in the capital Tashkent vacate a property the firm had taken over with the intention of building luxury apartments, according to a statement from the Uzbek government’s Committee on Religious Affairs.

JTA last week reported on the dispute based on an article published in the Russian-Jewish weekly L’Chaim. Multiple newspapers and forums in Uzbekistan and beyond have reported on the dispute.

The firm “has withdrawn a claim for ownership of a plot of land belonging to the European Jewish Religious Community in Tashkent. Accordingly, the demolition of the synagogue belonging to the European Jewish Religious Community in Tashkent was prevented,” the committee said.

The firm withdrew its lawsuit during a court hearing on August 5, Zeev Levin, the head of the Hebrew University’s Central Asian Research Unit, confirmed to JTA.

“The court noted that the Republic of Uzbekistan is a multi-religious state,” the committee statement said. It ensures the “full protection of the rights of members of any denomination by law.”

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