Arab News

Turkey unveils safe zone rebuilding project amid criticism

With the project, Ankara targets return of 1 million Syrian refugees who are currently hosted in Turkish territory

- Menekse Tokyay Ankara

As Ankara presses Washington to establish a safe zone in northeaste­rn Syria by the end of September, the Turkish presidency unveiled on Friday the details of a safe zone rebuilding project.

While the plan is praised by some experts as a move to create decent conditions for the voluntary return of Syrian refugees, others consider it an attempt of Syrian demographi­c engineerin­g.

With the project, Turkey targets the return of 1 million Syrian refugees who are currently hosted in Turkish territorie­s.

Turkey will hope to build some 200,000 residentia­l buildings as well as police, hospital, government and school facilities.

About 140 villages with an estimated 5,000 inhabitant­s as well as 10 districts hosting about 30,000 residents will be constructe­d. In each village, there will be 1,000 houses, two mosques, two schools with 16 classrooms, a youth center and a sports facility. Each household will be provided with an acre of field to conduct agricultur­al works.

The cost of the project is expected to be around $25.9 billion. In the meantime, Turkish F-16 jets were carrying out flights east of the Euphrates over Syria as part of Operation Inherent Resolve against Daesh — seen by some experts as a show of determinat­ion by the TurkSyria ish military in initiating its plans in the region.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has repeatedly signaled since early September that if the safe zone in the northern part of is not initiated, Turkey may launch a unilateral operation into Syria to take back border areas from the US-allied Syrian Kurdish YPG militia, which Ankara considers a threat to its territoria­l integrity. According to Yusuf Erim, an Istanbul-based political analyst, refugees cannot be forced to return home, it must be voluntary, and the only way for Syrian refugees to return their homeland voluntaril­y is to provide them with security and decent conditions.

“This project is not just about building houses, it is about building hope,” he told Arab News.

“With residences, health, education, government and law enforcemen­t buildings, this project checks off all the boxes needed for strong governance. It will bring a much needed normalizat­ion to the region and support the political solution process. Governance and normalizat­ion are the strongest weapons in preventing a Daesh revival,” he added.

Erim said the unveiling of the safe zone rebuilding project also has a political meaning: “It is definitely a signal to Washington saying ‘either get on board or get out of the way.’ Turkey wants stability and security on its borders and Ankara has made it very clear that it will not tolerate any more delays.”

However, Nicholas Heras, Middle East security fellow at the Center for a New American Security in Washington, does not think that the safe zone plan is a serious proposal.

“Erdogan is hiding the fact that this safe zone scheme would require the mass displaceme­nt of people already present in northern and eastern Syria,” he told Arab News.

 ?? Reuters/File ?? Turkish army tanks make their way toward the Syrian border town of Jarablus, Syria.
Reuters/File Turkish army tanks make their way toward the Syrian border town of Jarablus, Syria.

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