The National - News

Kurds plan more protests against Turkey, in Britain

- CAROLINE BYRNE London

Kurdish protests are planned in Britain this week as part of a major action by community groups in various European cities to highlight the plight of the northern Syrian enclave targeted by Turkish forces.

Hundreds of pro-Kurdish supporters closed major train stations in London and Manchester and clashed with police at the airport in Dusseldorf, Germany on Sunday to protest against Ankara’s offensive in Afrin.

More UK demonstrat­ions are expected this week with the Kurdistan Solidarity Campaign group calling for protests in London and Cardiff today, and in Bristol tomorrow.

Traveller Chris Woodhouse told Sky News that some families were reduced to tears during Sunday’s protests in Manchester when trains were cancelled or delayed for more than an hour. Travel disruption was specially stressful for those trying to get to the city’s airport.

Social media images showed flag-waving demonstrat­ors on the rail tracks at Manchester Piccadilly station carrying yellow banners in support of the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG). Some carried signs saying “stop Turkey from helping ISIL terrorists”.

London’s King’s Cross train station was closed for several hours on Sunday evening and trains were diverted when protesters converged outside the station. They held signs reading: “Hands off Afrin”. British Transport Police told

The National today that there were no arrests.

An estimated 200 pro-Kurdish demonstrat­ors clashed with police and pro-Turkish supporters at Dusseldorf’s airport on Sunday and police reportedly used pepper spray on the crowd. A number of people were injured.

One of the Dusseldorf protesters held up a banner reading

“Afrin is becoming our Vietnam – we will defeat fascism”.

Afrin is under attack by Turkish military in what some Kurds consider ethnic cleansing. Tukey, however, accuses the YPG of supporting the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, which Nato considers a terrorist group.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has threatened to purge Kurdish militia from Afrin.

Yesterday, the Turkish army told the Anadolu news agency that its military had neutralise­d 3,347 YPG fighters since its cross-border Operation Olive Branch began in late January.

The group Friends of Kurdistan Manchester posted a statement on Facebook saying that Sunday’s protests were part of an internatio­nal day of action to highlight events in Afrin. The group did not respond to a request for comment from

The National yesterday. “The Kurdish community and its allies are marching in Manchester, and across the world, in solidarity with the defenders of Afrin and demanding internatio­nal interventi­on,” they said.

“Turkey is the second-largest army in Nato and its forces have committed numerous war crimes since crossing the border into Afrin.”

Turkey is the secondlarg­est army in Nato and its forces have committed numerous war crimes since crossing the border into Afrin FRIENDS OF KURDISTAN MANCHESTER Kurdish support group

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 ?? AFP ?? Top, protestors during a demonstrat­ion against Turkey’s offensive against Kurds in Syria’s Afrin region on Sunday at the airport in Dusseldorf. Left, German police arrest a protestor during clashes after a demonstrat­ion against Turkey’s Afrin offensive
AFP Top, protestors during a demonstrat­ion against Turkey’s offensive against Kurds in Syria’s Afrin region on Sunday at the airport in Dusseldorf. Left, German police arrest a protestor during clashes after a demonstrat­ion against Turkey’s Afrin offensive
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