Arab News

Erdogan ‘risks lives’ blocking water supply to Kurds

- Arab News Istanbul

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan was accused by aid and rights groups on Wednesday of risking lives during the coronaviru­s pandemic by restrictin­g water supplies to nearly half-a-million Kurds in northeast Syria.

The restrictio­n compromise­s humanitari­an workers’ efforts to protect local communitie­s against COVID-19, especially in terms of handwashin­g practices and personal hygiene, Human Rights Watch said.

On March 29, Turkey blocked the flow of water through Allouk pumping station near the Syrian town of Ras Al-Ain. The station has been controlled by Turkey and allied Syrian forces since October 2019, when Ankara launched an offensive against Syrian-Kurdish forces. “A water shortage would certainly make a coronaviru­s outbreak less controllab­le in Syria, and drive individual­s to escape to where they can get treatment and be protected, and the likely target would be neighborin­g countries, including Turkey,” Sara Kayyali, a Syria researcher at Human Rights Watch, told Arab News.

Allouk had been providing water to about 460,000 people in Syria’s Al-Hasakeh governorat­e, including those living in displaceme­nt camps such as Al-Hol and Areesheh. UNICEF warned that the “interrupti­on

of water supply during the current efforts to curb the spread of the coronaviru­s disease puts children and families at unacceptab­le risk.”

Human Rights Watch said: “The Turkish authoritie­s should do everything they can to immediatel­y resume supply to these communitie­s.”

The group is concerned that the water shortage may lead to a greater risk of coronaviru­s contagion in the region.

Faruk Logoglu, a retired Turkish diplomat, called for the introducti­on of “corona diplomacy” by Ankara in its relations with Syria, which does not have enough hospitals, ventilator­s, medicines and medical equipment. “Contacts should be initiated” by Turkey with the Syrian government “to develop a joint plan of action to fight the pandemic,” he said. Some regions of Syria, especially opposition-held Idlib province, are a ticking time bomb, with an insufficie­nt number of coronaviru­s test kits.

 ?? AP ?? A displaced Syrian girl fills water from a cistern at a refugee camp in the northern countrysid­e of Idlib.
AP A displaced Syrian girl fills water from a cistern at a refugee camp in the northern countrysid­e of Idlib.

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