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Turkey smuggled Syrian antiquities via ISIL, en route to Europe

February 17, 2015 By administrator

Turkey will help ISIL anyway it can…

Syrian antiquities AA Photo

Syrian antiquities AA Photo

A middle-man in Turkey’s southeast has related the journey of antiquities from Syria that are smuggled through Turkey and constitute an important source of income for the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), according to a BBC news report.

Trade in antiquities is one of ISIL’s main sources of funding, along with oil and kidnapping. For this reason the U.N. Security Council last week banned all trade in artifacts from Syria, accusing jihadist militants of looting cultural heritage to strengthen its ability to organize and carry out terrorist attacks.

After smuggling antiquities, a middle-man, like “Ahmed,” is needed to sell the items. Originally from eastern Syria, he is based in a town in southern Turkey, which he does not want to specify to avoid the police.

As a Turkish-speaker, he is popular with Syrian smugglers, who ask if he can move goods on to local dealers. He shows a blanket next to him filled with artifacts – statues of animals and human figures, glasses, vases and coins. They were dug up in the last few months.

“They come from the east of Syria, from Raqqa and the other areas controlled by ISIL,” he said.
ISIL plays an active part in controlling the trade, he said. Anyone wanting to excavate has to receive permission from ISIL inspectors, who monitor the finds and destroy any human figures, which are seen as idolatrous.

Ahmed said ISIL takes 20 percent as tax, adding that they tax everything.

The main trade is in stone works, statues and gold, and it can be extremely lucrative. “I have seen one piece sold for $1.1 million,” he said. “It was a piece from the year 8,500 B.C.”

He has had to pay a sizeable bond to the smugglers to get this material and he does not want to lose any of it. The final destination is Western Europe, he said.

“Turkish merchants sell it to dealers in Europe. They call them, send pictures … people from Europe come to check the goods and take them away.”

Ahmed will have to return the looted artifacts to his Syrian contacts, but he will not be returning to his homeland. “If I went back I’d be killed,” he said.

Another dealer, calling himself “Muhammed,” who is originally from Damascus but now plies his trade in the Bekaa valley on the border between Syria and Lebanon, says Lebanon is also a route for smuggling Syrian artifacts.

“There are three friends in Aleppo we deal with, these people move from Aleppo all the way to the border here and pay a taxi driver to sneak it in,” Muhammed said.

February/17/2015

Filed Under: News Tagged With: antiquities, ISIL, smuggle, Syria, Turkey

Turkey mafia paid to smuggle Paris suspect into Syria: Sources

January 20, 2015 By administrator

c39ce6c4-aa12-4e5a-8e96-20cb2722add2A mafia gang in Turkey was paid “tens of thousands of dollars” by the ISIL terrorists to smuggle a female suspect in Paris terror attack into Syria, Turkish intelligence sources say. Report Presstv

On Saturday, British Daily Mirror cited Turkish intelligence sources as saying that the mafia gangsters had received the large sum of money from the ISIL terror group to transfer Hayat Boumeddiene to Syria after she fled France and arrived on Turkey’s soil.

Boumeddiene is suspected of being involved in a hostage-taking drama at a supermarket in Paris.

According to the British daily, the 26-year-old woman had met with two members of the mafia gang upon her arrival at the Sabiha Gokcen airport in the Turkish city of Istanbul.

The ISIL had tasked the Turkish gangsters with ensuring Boumeddiene’s safety and her accomplice as they sneaked into the ISIL-controlled area of Syria, the sources said.

Upon her arrival in Turkey, Boumeddiene, was instructed by the mafia members to head for Turkey’s southeastern border town of Sanliurfa, where she was met again by the smugglers.

“We know a certain amount from phone records. She was communicating with two smugglers in Istanbul,” a security source was quoted as saying, adding, “They organized for her travel to Sanliurfa. We believe she travelled by bus or car. She crossed the border on the day of the attacks in Paris.”

The female suspect later traveled on foot across the border into Syria from Tal Abyad, another Turkish border town.

Turkish security sources said earlier this month that Boumeddiene had fled France and entered the country on January 2 before the recent spate of violence in Paris, and she was now believed to be in Syria.

She is said to be the wife of Amedy Coulibaly, the gunman who was killed after anti-terror units stormed the grocery shop in the eastern Porte de Vincennes area of the French capital. Officials say four hostages were also killed during the raid.

Coulibaly and Boumeddiene are also said to be responsible for the fatal shooting of a policewomen in southern Paris on January 8.

In a posthumous video, Coulibaly claimed he was acting on behalf of the ISIL Takfiri group.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: mafia, Paris, smuggle, suspect, Turkish

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