Vatican City: A prominent bishop on Wednesday accused Turkey of preventing Christians from fleeing Syria while allowing terrorists responsible for their persecution to cross its border unchecked.

Jacques Behnan Hindo, the Syrian Catholic Archbishop of Al Hassakeh Nisibi, made the claim on Vatican Radio, a day after Daesh militants abducted at least 90 Assyrian Christians from villages that had been under the control of Kurdish forces.

“Every day, families are emigrating from Damascus by plane because of the blockade we have around us,” the bishop said.

“In the north, Turkey allows through lorries, Daesh fighters, oil stolen from Syria, wheat and cotton: all of these can cross the border but nobody [from the Christian community] can pass over.”

The abducted Christians were part of Syria’s tiny Assyrian community, which is mostly based in Al Hassakeh province near the Turkish border.

There were just 30,000 Assyrians in Syria before the country’s conflict erupted in March 2011.

At that point Syria had an estimated total Christian population of around 1.2 million people. Pope Francis is among those who have voiced fears the community could be decimated by mass emigration as a result of the conflict.

Control of Al Hassakeh is currently divided between Kurdish forces, who in some places patrol with regime troops, and Daesh fighters.

The bishop said he was hopeful the Daesh offensive which led to the kidnappings would soon be over “because the Kurds are gathering their forces to go and fight them.”

The Kurdish forces have been backed by US-led air strikes against Daesh targets.