Turkey responsible for abuses in northern Syria: HRW
ANKARA: Turkey bears responsibility for human rights abuses and violations of land and property rights in swathes of northern Syria it controls alongside its proxies, a Human Rights Watch (HRW) report said yesterday.
Since 2016, Turkey has carried out successive ground operations to expel the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) from Syria’s north, with its proxies now controlling two large border strips. Turkey “bears responsibility for the serious abuses and potential war crimes committed by members of its own forces and local armed groups it supports” in Syria’s north, HRW said in its report.
Turkish officials in Syria’s north have in some cases “been directly involved in apparent war crimes”, with Turkish forces and intelligence agencies involved “in carrying out and overseeing abuses”, the report said.
Abuses and violations are “most often directed at Kurdish civilians and anyone else perceived to have ties to Kurdish-led forces”, HRW said.
Kurdish women detainees have reported sexual violence including rape, while children as young as six months old have been detained with their mothers, the report said. Ankara views the Kurdish People’s Protection Units that dominate the SDF as an offshoot of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, which it considers a terrorist group.
The military police and the myriad rebel factions of the Syrian National Army, both backed by Ankara, “have arbitrarily arrested and detained, forcibly disappeared, tortured and otherwise ill-treated, and subjected to unfair military trials scores of people with impunity,” HRW said.