Daily Sabah (Turkey)

YPG, Daesh cooperate against Turkey, exploit migrants

PKK terrorists and their Syria affiliate, the U.S.-backed YPG, work with the Daesh terrorist group against Turkey and exploit migrants’ desperatio­n for human smuggling while also benefittin­g from the illegal oil trade, Interior Minister Süleyman Soylu say

- ISTANBUL - DAILY SABAH

THE PKK and Daesh terrorist groups unite against Turkey and even exploit migrants for their aims, Interior Minister Süleyman Soylu said yesterday.

Speaking to Ankara bureau chiefs in the capital, Soylu underlined that even though terrorist groups continue to engage in human traffickin­g and oil trade, Turkey has stepped up security at its borders and has not allowed terrorist elements or ammunition to cross.

It has been reported several times that the PKK’s Syrian wing, the YPG, and Daesh cooperate, with the former freeing members of Daesh from prisons, endangerin­g the lives of the local people.

“Our capacities are strong both within our borders and across,” Soylu said.

Moreover, the minister underlined that some nongovernm­ental organizati­ons (NGOs) in Europe and in other parts of the world are being used as a shield to conduct espionage, while some members of these NGOs also frequently engage with the PKK in Syria.

Saying that Turkey will not allow these aid activities to be exploited, Soylu emphasized that the necessary authoritie­s have been warned. Those fleeing areas of Syria controlled by the YPG first go to Atmeh, then to Idlib and then try to come to Turkey, he said.

“The safe zone has started to serve the function of a filter. Therefore the number of Syrians stopped from illegally entering Turkey through its southern border has steadily dropped to a third in the years between 2017 and 2021,” Soylu said, indicating that the pressure of migration has decreased.

Meanwhile, 415,000 Syrians entered Turkey in 2017, 284,000 in 2018, 439,000 in 2020 and 117,000 in 2021. On the other hand, 620,000 Syrians were prevented from entering Turkey and 306,000 have been deported.

He also spoke on the return of Syrians to their homes from Turkey. Soylu also elaborated that Turkey is closely following and analyzing the situation of Syrians living in Turkey and their future ambitions. According to the minister, 28% said they would return if the war ended, 13.7% said they would head back even if the regime did not change, 12% would go if there is a safe zone, 4.1% wanted to return even with an ongoing war, 37% were indecisive and 3.1% were not considerin­g returning to Syria.

Since the beginning of the Syrian civil war in 2011, Turkey has backed moderate opposition groups against the Assad regime and opened its doors to those who had to flee the country to save their lives. Turkey hosts more Syrian migrants than any other country in the world.

THE PKK and Daesh terrorist groups unite against Turkey and even exploit migrants for their aims, Interior Minister Süleyman Soylu said yesterday.

Speaking to Ankara bureau chiefs in the capital, Soylu underlined that even though terrorist groups continue to engage in human traffickin­g and oil trade, Turkey has stepped up security at its borders and has not allowed terrorist elements or ammunition to cross.

It has been reported several times that the PKK’s Syrian wing, the YPG, and Daesh cooperate, with the former freeing members of Daesh from prisons, endangerin­g the lives of the local people.

“Our capacities are strong both within our borders and across,” Soylu said.

Moreover, the minister underlined that some nongovernm­ental organizati­ons (NGOs) of Europe and other countries are being used as a shield to conduct espionage while some members of these NGOs also engage with the PKK in Syria frequently.

Saying that Turkey will not allow these aid activities to be exploited, Soylu emphasized that the necessary authoritie­s have been warned.

Those fleeing Syria’s areas controlled by the YPG, first go to Atmeh, then to Idlib and then try to come to Turkey, he elaborated.

“The safe zone has started to serve the function of a filter. Therefore the number of Syrians stopped from illegally entering Turkey through its southern border has steadily dropped to a third in the years between 2017 and 2021,” Soylu said, indicating that the pressure of migration has decreased.

Meanwhile, 415,000 Syrians entered Turkey in 2017, 284,000 in 2018, 439,000 in 2020 and 117,000 in 2021.

He also spoke on the return of Syrians back to their homes from Turkey. Soylu also elaborated that Turkey is closely following and analyzing the situation of Syrians living in Turkey and their future ambitions. According to the minister, 28% said they would return if the war ended, 13.7% said they would head back even if the regime did not change, 12% would go if there is a safe zone, 4.1% wanted to return even with an ongoing war, 37% were indecisive, and 3.1% were not considerin­g returning to Syria.

Since the beginning of the Syrian civil war in 2011, Turkey has backed moderate opposition groups against the Assad regime and opened its doors to those who had to flee the country to save their lives. Turkey hosts more Syrian migrants than any other country in the world. The country also leads humanitari­an aid efforts for Syrians in Turkey and opposition-controlled areas of northern Syria.

Within this scope, Turkey is also building briquette houses for Syrians in the northweste­rn Idlib province, the last opposition bastion. Soylu said that 53,000 briquette houses of 100,000 have been completed. “These people will have a comfortabl­e life.”

The lives of Syrian people dealing with many difficulti­es in rural Idlib’s tent camps have become much harder due to the recent winter conditions. With the humanitari­an catastroph­e in the region reaching new heights, people have been trying to survive by taking shelter under trees or shaky tents built on mud and puddles. Many Turkish NGOs and state agencies, including the Disaster and Emergency Management Authority (AFAD), the Turkish Red Crescent (Kızılay) and the Humanitari­an Relief Foundation (İHH), continue to provide vital aid and conduct relief efforts in the region.

Turkey has made large investment­s in its social cohesion policies to enable Syrians to smoothly integrate into Turkish society.

Ankara so far has spent around $40 billion (TL 274 billion) on the Syrians in Turkey, while the European Union has provided only around 3 billion euros ($3.34 billion) of the promised 6 billion euros – a gap Turkey has long demanded be closed.

The minister also added that the number of voluntary returns to safe zones has increased to 480,000.

RESETTLEME­NT OF SYRIANS

Meanwhile, Turkey’s counterter­rorism operations across the border in northern Syria since 2016 have also allowed hundreds of thousands of Syrians in Turkey to resettle in their homeland.

After launching three consecutiv­e operations in northern Syria, Turkey rolled up its sleeves to reconstruc­t hospitals, schools, mosques and roads destroyed by the YPG. In order to ameliorate the region’s social infrastruc­ture, people were given food and clothing by several NGOs, while roads and buildings were rebuilt.

“We are trying to prevent further migration including from Afghanista­n, Syria,” Soylu said, indicating that previously Turkey was granting temporary protection to those coming from Damascus along with Syrians fleeing war zones, but this regulation will not be effective anymore.

Across Syria, the human cost of the war has been huge. More than 350,000 people have been killed and over half the population uprooted, many of them from former rebel enclaves that were bombed into submission by Damascus and its allies.

But while the front lines have been largely frozen for years, an economic crisis is exacting an increasing­ly heavy toll across the fractured nation. The United Nations says the number of people in need of humanitari­an support is greater than at any point since the war began.

Already hit by extensive damage to infrastruc­ture and industries during the war, the once productive Syrian economy has nose-dived further since 2019 when contagion from neighborin­g Lebanon’s financial crisis led the Syrian pound to collapse.

However, the number of those wanting to enter Turkey from Damascus has increased, the minister said, highlighti­ng that their justificat­ion was not fleeing civil war but rather economic issues.

“Since 2011, Turkey is one of the countries most affected by the crises from all corners of the world from Bangladesh to Syria due to security risks. The reason behind this is not these countries but arms and smuggling activities that affect them.”

On the migration crisis, Soylu also criticized Western countries for not engaging in substantia­l efforts to curb the crisis and ameliorate the situation in source countries of migration. He reminded that former German Chancellor Angela Merkel was a leader who understood the issue of migration but there has been a void in the EU ever since her term ended.

“You cannot manage migration if you do not support humanitari­an issues,” he said.

LAVRION CAMP HARBORING PKK

Soylu further spoke on the terrorist activities and crossings in and out of Greece and especially the Lavrion camp.

“We have notified Greek authoritie­s regarding the number and names of PKK terrorists and their activities,” he said, explaining that the Lavrion camp serves as a base for terrorists and a point from where they cross over to northern Iraq. “Without this camp, there would have been less participat­ion in the PKK.”

Greece has long been accused of being a favorite hideout for terrorists, from the DHKP-C to the PKK. Those fleeing Turkey have taken shelter in refugee camps in Lavrion near Athens under the guise of asylum-seekers, especially in the 1980s. Despite the closure of Lavrion in 2013 amid pressure from Turkey, Greece continues to be the primary destinatio­n for DHKP-C terrorists.

Athens has also rejected Ankara’s extraditio­n requests for terrorists from groups advocating armed insurgency against the state and those involved in armed attacks against Turkish security forces and political parties, in addition to other targets.

 ?? ?? Interior Minister Süleyman Soylu speaks at the evaluation meeting of the year 2021 at the Gendarmeri­e General Command in the capital Ankara, Turkey, Feb.16, 2022.
Interior Minister Süleyman Soylu speaks at the evaluation meeting of the year 2021 at the Gendarmeri­e General Command in the capital Ankara, Turkey, Feb.16, 2022.

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