The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Turkey cracks down on oil smuggling linked to IS

- Desmond Butler

HACIPASA, Turkey — Sevda, a 22-year-old waitress in a brown apron, recounts how she made a small fortune running smuggled diesel from a village on Turkey’s wild and dangerous border with Syria. But the days when she could earn 20 times her salary waiting tables came to an abrupt end several months ago when police arrested her and slapped her employers with a massive fine.

The smuggled fuel came from oil wells in Iraq or Syria controlled by militants, including the Islamic State group, and was sold to middlemen who smuggled it across the Turkish-Syrian border. Western intelligen­ce officials have alleged that Turkey is turning a blind eye to a flourishin­g trade that strengthen­s the Islamic State group, and Secretary of State John Kerry has called on Turkey to do more to stem the trade. Analysts estimate that the Islamic State group gets up to $3 million a day in revenue from oil fields seized in Iraq and Syria.

But in about two dozen interviews, Turkish authoritie­s, smugglers and vendors along Turkey’s 900-kilometer border with Syria paint a remarkably similar picture: Oil smuggling was a booming business until about six months ago, when Turkish authoritie­s ramped up a multilayer­ed crackdown that has significan­tly disrupted the illicit trade. Many of those interviewe­d, including Sevda, gave only their first name or asked for anonymity out of fear of reprisals by authoritie­s or smugglers, who believe that reports in the Turkish news media led to the crackdown.

Turkish authoritie­s say they have beefed up border controls, arrested dozens of smugglers and have gone after consumers with an extensive stop-and-search operation on Turkish highways where fuel tanks are tested for smuggled oil. The AP accompanie­d police on a tour of anti-smuggling measures in Hatay province, which has been the main smuggling conduit, observing new checkpoint­s and border patrols.

Turkey says it seized nearly 20 million liters of oil at the border in the first eight months of this year, about four times as much as in the same period the year before, while illicit fuel discovered on consumers has dropped considerab­ly.

At the peak of Turkey’s oil smuggling boom, the main transit point was a dusty ham- let called Hacipasa on the Orontes River that marks the border with Syria. Hacipasa has been a smuggling haven for decades, authoritie­s and residents say. As in other border towns, many families straddle the frontier and trade commoditie­s like sugar and cigarettes back and forth without customs controls.

But Syria’s civil war and the capture of oil wells by Islamic State militants opened a giant market that made moguls out of some locals.

“Some people multiplied their wealth a thousand fold in a few months,” says a local gas station owner who declined to be named.

Over tea in his immaculate office, the chain-smoking man who has spent his life along the border says he witnessed the boom and the bust of the smuggling business. As smuggling took off last year and cheap has from across the border became readily available, 80 percent of his legal diesel business disappeare­d, hesaid. Since Turkey launched its crackdown, most of it has come back and business is now only 20 percent off what it used to be.

In many points along the Syrian border, diesel smuggling has been done on a small scale, according to smugglers and dealers. But some in Hacipasa figured out how to take it to a higher level, using scores of illicit pipelines under the Orontes. The pipelines were up to three kilometers long and laid up to 15 meters deep, dug using sophistica­ted imported vehicles with equipment designed to lay fiber-optic cables that costs hundreds of thousands of dollars each, according to authoritie­s and some of those involved. The diesel, crudely refined in Syria, emerged from of spigots in cotton fields in Hacipasa and nearby towns, where eager buyers lined up.

Local authoritie­s began digging up those pipelines months ago, cutting off perhaps the biggest source of

Turkish authoritie­s say they have beefed up border controls, arrested dozens of smugglers and have gone after consumers with an extensive stop-and-search operation on Turkish highways where fuel tanks are tested for smuggled oil

smuggled oil in the market.

Sevda is an acquaintan­ce of a journalist who works for AP and has been based in Turkey for many years. She agreed to be interviewe­d on condition that she be referred to only by her first name, which she wore on her waitress’ apron.

She says that once a week she would coordinate oil runs, sitting next to the driver on 10-hour truck trips from Hacipasa with thousands of liters of diesel to a company in the Anatolian city of Denizli, earning $6,500 a trip. She could make less money on quick local trips in a Mercedes sedan with a secret extra gas tank. Her descriptio­n of the diesel trade near Hacipasa is consistent with AP’s reporting on the border with Turkish police and people involved in oil smuggling.

“Everyone was doing it,” she says with a giggle. “It was so much money.”

About six months ago, the smuggling was so rampant, Sevda says, that trucks and cars with buyers were often backed up on the windy old road to Hacipasa. The arrest ended her smuggling career. She says she was released and the company that had been buying diesel from her negotiated down a fine of more than $60,000 to half that, and paid it.

Turkish authoritie­s, including top officials from the police, border guard and gendarmeri­e paramilita­ry police, say the crackdown began last year but took off in the last six months— a period in which Turkey came under increasing pressure from allies, including the United States, concerned that the Islamic State group was funding itself largely from the illicit oil trade.

The extremist group has taken over large sections of Syria and Iraq, and has until recently controlled as many as 11 oil fields in the two countries, analysts say. Within Iraq and Syria, the group sells oil to middlemen at a significan­t discount. Some of that is smuggled into Turkey, while much is sold locally. In recent days, a U.S.-led coalition against the Islamic State group has been targeting refineries in the two countries.

Turkish authoritie­s say the crackdown grew out of concern for internal security and the loss of tax revenues. While they acknowledg­e that smuggling was once rampant, they dismiss accusation­s that they have tacitly allowed the extremists a revenue stream out of sympathy for any oppo- nent of the Syrian government.

“If you look at the measures that have been taken in the last two years, and specifical­ly the last year, you will see that Turkey isn’t allowing these kinds of activities at all,” says Cemalettin Hasimi, an adviser to the Turkish prime ministry, arguing that even the United States struggles to effectivel­y patrol its borders. “If the U.S. had resolved smuggling on the Mexican border then probably Turkey would have done the same thing. ... It’s the most difficult thing to do.”

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