The Daily Telegraph

Turkish forces besiege 700,000 Kurds in Syrian enclave of Afrin

- By Josie Ensor MIDDLE EAST CORRESPOND­ENT

TURKISH forces along with allied rebels completely surrounded the Syrian city of Afrin yesterday, leaving hundreds of thousands of its mostly Kurdish residents besieged.

Hundreds of civilians managed to flee the advancing troops on Monday, but an estimated 700,000 are now encircled in Afrin and surroundin­g villages and towns.

The only road out was in range of Turkish artillery fire and was therefore impassable, the Uk-based monitor Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights said. Some 230 civilians have been killed in Turkey’s Operation Olive

‘Where is the internatio­nal community? Why don’t they cry tears for all Syrian civilians, not only some?

Branch. However, Kurdish fighters warned the new siege could trigger a humanitari­an crisis. There was no water in the city yesterday after Turkish forces seized control of the local dam, and residents say they have relied on water wells for their consumptio­n.

“Where is the internatio­nal community? Why don’t they cry tears for all Syrian civilians, not only some?” Ahmed Murad, a resident of Afrin told The Daily Telegraph. “They are too scared to criticise their Turkish ally.”

While attention in recent weeks has focused on a ferocious regime assault on rebel-held Eastern Ghouta, in Syria’s north Turkish forces and Syrian opposition fighters have been advancing in their offensive against the Kurdish enclave.

Turkey launched its operation on Jan 20, saying it intended to clear the border of People’s Protection Unit (YPG) fighters, whom they consider terrorists. However, its mission has expanded to include territory deep into Syria.

Senior Turkish officials have said that Ankara was trying, through war, to take lands it occupied during the Ottoman Empire. “We aim to give Afrin back to its rightful owners,” Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, the president, has said.

Redur Xelil, head of foreign relations for the Syrian Democratic Forces, a Usbacked alliance of fighters that includes the YPG, accused the Turkish forces of carrying out “demographi­c change” in Kurdish territory captured in Afrin.

The United Nations said that it received “disturbing reports” of civilian deaths in the north-western Syrian enclave and that it believes “tens of thousands” have been displaced. Turkey denied the claims.

The Turkish offensive opened a new front in a multi-sided civil war which enters its eighth year tomorrow. Turkey considers the YPG a serious threat to its security, while the US has relied on the group in the fight against Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (Isil).

Ankara is riled by US support and arming of the Kurds, and accuses Washington of not fulfilling a promise to move the Syrian Kurdish fighters in Manbij, east of the Euphrates River.

♦ Iraqi authoritie­s said yesterday they were lifting a near six-month air blockade imposed on Iraqi Kurdistan in response to its holding of an independen­ce referendum.

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