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Armenian FM Armenian Genocide documented by thousands of official records

February 2, 2018 By administrator

Turkey cannot but realize that the recognition process of the Armenian Genocide is irreversible, Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian has said.

“It is obvious that the century-long denialist policy has failed. However, Turkey continues to stick to the stereotypes. Ankara does not shy away to distort not just the historic facts but the current realities, including by misrepresenting the rulings of the European Court of Human Rights,” Minister Nalbandian said in comments to Radio Liberty.

The statement comes after Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu described French President Emmanuel Macron’s recent remarks on the Armenian Genocide as “populism.”

“In an open letter addressed to the Prime Minister of Turkey the International Association of Genocide Scholars has rightly stated that the Armenian Genocide is abundantly documented by thousands of official records of the United States and other nations around the world including the Ottoman Turkey’s wartime allies Germany, Austria and Hungary, by eyewitness accounts of missionaries and diplomats, by the testimony of survivors, by the decades of historical and legal scholarships, and even by Ottoman court-martial records,” Minister Nalbandian said.

“It is noteworthy that Germany and Austria have not only recognized the Armenian Genocide as many other countries had done but also acknowledged their part of responsibility, as Turkey’s allies of the time,” Armenia’s top diplomat continued.

“The international community has emphasized on many occasions that the denial of Genocide creates a breeding ground for the repetition of crimes against humanity. Instead of labeling as populists those who have recognized the Armenian Genocide, Ankara needs to abandon threatening populism of its denialist policy and candidly face its own past,” Edward Nalbandian stated.

Speaking at a dinner with the Coordinating Council of the Coordination Council of Armenian Organizations in France (CCAF), Macron said he would add the Day of Remembrance of the Armenian Genocide to the French calendar and bring the law criminalizing the genocide denial to the parliament.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, Turkey

The Bizarre American Lobbying War Over Turkish-Run U.S. charter public schools

February 1, 2018 By administrator

exiled cleric Fetullah Gulen.

The government of Turkey is seeking to discredit a network of U.S. charter schools linked to exiled cleric Fetullah Gulen.

By LIZ ESSLEY WHYTE

A law firm hired by the government of Turkey is lobbying state officials across the U.S. about what it alleges is a suspicious network of American charter schools run by a dangerous Turkish opposition leader.

Federal records show Turkey’s lawyers requested meetings in January 2018 with politicians in 26 states and the District of Columbia, including attorneys general, influential legislators and at least one governor — Michigan’s Rick Snyder. The legal team has already sat down with an official in the Arizona attorney general’s office, worked on legislation in Texas and attended school board meetings in California, Louisiana and Massachusetts.

It’s the latest move in a curious propaganda war playing out in America’s state capitals between Turkey’s ruling party and a secretive religious movement that the Center for Public Integrity previously revealed has funded scores of international trips for state lawmakers from places such as Texas and Tennessee. Nonprofits associated with what is commonly called the Gulen movement — named for the elderly Turkish cleric Fetullah Gulen — sponsored subsidized trips to Turkey for at least 151 state lawmakers, the Center for Public Integrity reported last year. Some of the state lawmakers who took the trips later introduced resolutions supporting the movement — or even backed some of the nearly 200 American charter schools linked to it.

“It’s such nonsense what’s going on in these schools,” said Robert Amsterdam, whose firm is leading the government of Turkey’s campaign to inform state leaders of what it calls “suspect” hiring of Turkish teachers and contractors, among other matters. “We think it’s very important for us to get the word out.”

Turkey retained Amsterdam and Partners LLP, an international law firm with offices in London and Washington, D.C., that specializes in cross-border disputes and white-collar crimes, in 2015 as the Gulen movement was falling out of favor with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s party. Following a failed coup attempt in July 2016, Turkish leaders sharpened their rhetoric, calling Gulen a terrorist and demanding the U.S. extradite him from the compound in Pennsylvania’s Poconos where he lives in exile.

Turkey then made headlines last fall when former White House national security adviser Michael Flynn was reported to be under investigation for helping to plan to kidnap Gulen and return him to Turkey. The White House has stayed mum about the request, and the Justice Department did not respond to a request for comment about the status of the extradition request.

Within Turkey, the ruling party has jailed more than 40,000 alleged supporters of Gulen and shut down related institutions ranging from news outlets to a bank. Stateside, Turkey has paid at least $1.8 million funding Amsterdam and his team in the effort to undermine the Gulen movement and the schools.

A spokesman for Gulen, Alp Aslandogan, denies that either Gulen or his followers had any involvement in the coup attempt. He said they are not worried about Amsterdam’s efforts with state officials because he is pushing “a toxic brand” — Erdogan. “The moment they realize it they will see the political and monetary motivation behind this,” he said. “Robert Amsterdam is not interested in the education of American kids.”

While spokespeople for the schools have said they aren’t affiliated with Gulen, Aslandogan acknowledged they were “started by individuals who are sympathetic to the Gulen movement.” He said the schools should be judged by their performance, and “by and large, they are doing a very good job.”

Some of the schools, such as those in the Harmony chain in Texas, indeed have won awards and recognition, while others have just mediocre test scores. Still, the schools have been dogged by accusations of financial irregularities and extensive hiring of Turkish citizens.

The new revelations of Turkish lobbying come at a delicate moment for U.S.-Turkey relations. In recent weeks, the two countries have found themselves on opposite sides in Syria, after the Turkish government attacked a Kurdish militia that is supported by American forces. Tensions grew after Turkish officials disputed the White House’s account of a phone call between President Donald Trump and Erdogan.

One of the Turkish government’s lobbying targets is Illinois’ powerful Democratic House Speaker Mike Madigan. John Martin, a lawyer representing Turkey, wrote him an email last week requesting a meeting.

Madigan may seem a surprising choice. He was among those who went on trips to Turkey guided by a Gulen nonprofit — in his case, four trips total. He paid for his hotels and flights and contributed to the cost of the trips, said his spokesman Steve Brown, but state records show he also disclosed at least one of the trips as a gift worth more than $500. Madigan has also appeared in a promotional video for one of the schools linked to the movement, Brown said.

Martin, the lawyer representing Turkey, acknowledges the “awkwardness” of reaching out to state officials such as Madigan who have already had positive experiences with the Gulen movement. “One of our intended messages is, ‘Hey, look, you may have taken a trip with these folks or you may have even received a political contribution,’” he said. “‘We’re here to inform you and let you know who these people are so that the next time your eyes are wide open.’”

But others find such efforts unusually aggressive.

“The zeal with which the Erdogan administration wants to root out and suppress the Gulen movement is surprising to me,” said William Martin, a friend of the Gulen movement and a professor at the Baker Institute for Public Policy at Rice University. “That is characteristic of an authoritarian regime and not a democratic regime.”

The lobbying team has also tried influencing legislation and law enforcement in Texas, which has around 40 Gulen-linked schools and at least 10 state lawmakers who have gone on trips to Turkey with the movement. “In Texas, there are a network of charter schools where there have been serious allegations of, or highly suspected activities of financial mismanagement, suspected fraud, apparent self-dealing,” John Martin wrote in an email in January 2018 requesting a meeting with the state’s Attorney General Ken Paxton.

Harmony Charter Schools in Texas, one of the school chains targeted by Amsterdam, points out that another state agency already dismissed an investigation instigated by the firm. “Since then the school has only grown in popularity, with an annual waiting list of about 30,000,” said Timothy Lankford, a spokesman for the school. “It clearly indicates the quality and efficiency of our organization. Harmony is a transparent organization.”

Turkey’s legal team also hired Texas lobbyist Jim Arnold at a rate of $20,000 per month, according to filings required under the Foreign Agents Registration Act. Last year, Arnold, a Republican strategist who ran Rick Perry’s campaign for lieutenant governor in 1998, attempted to drum up legislative support for bills to require more transparency from charter schools, but the measures failed to pass.

“I have had numerous complaints from many of my constituents about the Harmony schools,” said state Rep. Dan Flynn, a Republican who sponsored one of the bills. “I don’t think they have the same accountability as our other public schools.”

The Texas lawmaker received $250 in political contributions from Arnold’s firm since the lobbyist began working for Turkey. Flynn said Arnold, who did not respond to requests for comment, is a longtime supporter.

The Texas Charter School Association, an advocacy group that says it represents more than 90 percent of Texas’ public charter school students, defended the schools’ performance.

“Harmony provides high quality teaching and learning at Harmony, perhaps best exemplified by their May 2017 nomination as a Broad Prize finalist for the best public charter school system in the nation,” charter school association spokesman Seth Winick said in an email.

Still, Dan Flynn said he will try again to pass the transparency legislation when the Texas Legislature reconvenes next year.

Carrie Levine contributed to this story.

Source: https://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2018/02/01/the-bizarre-american-lobbying-war-over-turkish-run-schools-216562

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Erdoga, Gulen, Public Charter schools, Turkey

Kurds in Syria call on US support to rein in Turkish operations

February 1, 2018 By administrator

Kurdish forces in Syria have called on the United States to do more to stop Turkey’s assault on Afrin. The US is to allow 7,000 Syrian refugees to remain in the US for a further 18 months under protected status.

Syria’s Kurdish militias have grown frustrated with the United States and its stance over the assault by Turkish forces in Afrin, on mainly Kurdish areas of northwestern Syria near the Turkish border.

“How can they stand by and watch?” Aldar Khalil, a senior Kurdish politician, asked of the US-led coalition. “They should meet their obligations towards this force that participated with them (in the fight against terrorism). We consider their unclear and indecisive positions as a source of concern.”

Turkey began an offensive, dubbed Operation Olive Branch, on January 20 with the stated aim of hitting positions held by the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG) and “Islamic State” militants, although IS is not known to have a presence in Afrin. Turkey, a NATO ally of the United States, views the main Kurdish militia as an extension of the Kurdish insurgency it has battled for decades.

The offensive has so far killed more than 60 civilians and dozens of fighters on both sides. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has said the operation will be expanded to other areas, including Manbij, where American forces are stationed with Kurdish militia.

Avoiding conflict with Turkey

General Joseph Votel of US Central Command said Wednesday the US was doing “everything we absolutely can” to avoid a confrontation with Turkey in Syria. US officials also noted that President Donald Trump has spoken about the conflict directly with Erdogan and that the US government is publicly urging Turkey to limit its operation.

Kurdish officials say they do not expect the United States to go to war with Turkey or send troops to Afrin.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Afrin, Kurd, Turkey

Michael Rubin, Americans in Turkey face possible assassination

January 30, 2018 By administrator

American diplomats and military personnel in Turkey are in increasing danger as Turkish officials incite violence that can quickly spin out of control. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)

American diplomats and military personnel in Turkey are in increasing danger as Turkish officials incite violence that can quickly spin out of control. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)

by Michael Rubin,

Assassinations of American diplomats are thankfully rare. So too are attacks on American troops in friendly host countries. However, that may all be about to change.

American diplomats and military personnel in Turkey are in increasing danger as Turkish officials incite violence that can quickly spin out of control.

Bilateral relations between Turkey and the United States have been in precipitous decline since President Recep Tayyip Erdogan ascended to power. The Iraq War, of course, was deeply unpopular among Turks, although much of the anti-Americanism surrounding it was gratuitous and deliberate.

In July 2003, anti-Americanism in Turkey soared after members of the U.S. Army’s 173rd Airborne Brigade intercepted a Turkish special operations unit in Iraqi Kurdistan, zip-tying and hooding the Turkish operatives until their identities could be established.

Turkey was in the wrong in that incident. The unit was aiming to assassinate local leaders to sow discord. Nor were they there legally. Indeed, after all the polemics, Turkish defense journalists say none of those involved were ever promoted. Then-Prime Minister Erdogan used the incident to whip up anti-Americanism. What could have been quietly resolved was instead leaked widely to the Turkish press for that purpose only.

The following years, Metal Storm took Turkey by storm. It’s a novel about an American invasion and attempted partition of Turkey. The Turkish heroes, however, counter by stealing an American nuclear bomb and destroying Washington, D.C. After American troops seize Istanbul, Turkish resistance bogs them down in urban combat. Russia and China rally around Turkey, and the United States is forced to retreat.

Nor was Metal Storm alone. In 2006, Turkish directors Serdar Akar and Sadullah Senturk released “Valley of the Wolves: Iraq,” a fictionalized film about a Turkish commando unit tracking down the American commander responsible for “the Hood event.” The film, which starred Gary Busey, included a subplot embracing Jewish blood libel. Senior members of Erdogan’s political party financed the film, and Erdogan’s wife endorsed it.

Erdogan has long found anti-Americanism a useful tool: It is far easier for him to blame his failings on some external plot than either acknowledge failure or confess to corruption. But he has used two recent events to take anti-Americanism to a new level.

The first was the abortive “coup” of July 2016. While evidence points to the coup being more of a Reichstag Fire-type plot than a serious plot, Erdogan blames former ally Fethullah Gulen (a Pennsylvania-based theologian) and has demanded his extradition. Gulen is no angel, but none of the evidence provided by Turkey shows direct links between Gulen and the events of that evening. Thus, the American judiciary has refused to send Gulen back to Turkey, much to Erdogan’s annoyance. He has taken the refusal of the U.S. courts to abide by his demands as evidence of U.S. complicity.

Second, he has accused the United States of sponsoring terrorism because it has partnered with the People’s Protection Units (YPG), a Kurdish militia with close ties to the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), a group which has waged an insurgency inside Turkey since 1984. Here, Erdogan has a right to be angry.

The PKK is designated by the U.S. State Department as a terrorist group (although that designation had much to do with diplomatic nicety at a time Turkey was an ally). But then again, he and his supporters should ask why the Pentagon, after decades of working with Turkey and assisting its counterterror operations, decided to work on an albeit limited basis with the YPG. Here, the fault is Turkey’s. The overarching American regional goal between 2015 and 2017 was to defeat the Islamic State. Yet, rather than work with the Americans to do so, Erdogan worked against the United States. He allowed the Islamic State free transit across Turkey’s territory and held the Pentagon’s use of the Incirlik Air Base hostage at key times. It was against this backdrop that the United States began its partnership with the YPG as a last resort.

The Turkish military, long partners of the United States, has also made a deliberate decision to fan anti-Americanism and, more broadly, anti-NATO sentiment. The three most influential figures for the Turkish military are Dogu Perincek, Adnan Tanriverdi, and Hulusi Akar.

Perincek is a former Maoist turned staunch Turkish nationalist who sees Turkey’s future with Russia and seeks an exit from NATO. He is perhaps the most influential figure among top Turkish brass today.

Meanwhile, Erdogan has hired Tanriverdi, a former brigadier general fired in 1997 for his links to Islamists, to be his military counselor. Tanriverdi has worked assiduously to transform SADAT, his Islamist private security company, into a Turkish equivalent of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps in Iran. On the evening of the 2016 coup, for example, witnesses suggest it was SADAT, and not Gulenists or low-level soldiers, responsible for many of the civilian deaths.

Akar, for his part, has subordinated the principles to which he once swore for personal ambition. He is a weak, indecisive figure who seeks not to lead but only to ingratiate himself to Erdogan.

Perincek and Tanriverdi especially spin wild conspiracy theories about plots hatched by U.S. and NATO forces at Incirlik as well as NATO plots against Turkey. Perincek’s newspaper, for example, last week called for the arrest of American personnel in Turkey’s NATO facilities.

Others, sensing Erdogan’s desires, pile on. Egemen Bagis, a former minister and top Erdogan advisor, for example, has declared that Turkey is fighting American forces, and not just the YPG, in Afrin.

For Turks who only receive their news from Turkish outlets controlled by Erdogan, this makes Americans in Incirlik or walking down the street in Istanbul legitimate targets.

Incitement matters. When U.S. Navy ships have docked in Turkey for port calls, Turkish nationalists have attacked U.S. sailors. Russia’s experience in Turkey also illustrates: In December 2016, against a steady drumbeat of incitement against Russia at the time, a young Turk raised on Turkish propaganda shot the Russian ambassador several times in the back, killing him (Erdogan calls the Turkish suspect a Gulenist, but this is a common tactic to eschew responsibility and there is no credible evidence to support Erdogan’s charge).

At present, the United States does not have an ambassador in Turkey, relying instead on a charge d’affaires. Frankly, it would be unsafe to send a new ambassador. U.S. ambassadors must often rely not only on their own immediate security details but also on host country security. On this issue, Turkey can no longer be trusted. Nor are Ankara or Istanbul safe for American personnel.

If Erdogan or Perincek ordered a mob into Incirlik, Turkish forces would stand down and the base would be overrun. To be assigned to Turkey as an American diplomat or military officer is increasingly as dangerous as being asked to reside in Libya.

Simply put, if President Trump doesn’t want his own Benghazi to tar his legacy, it may be time to scale back the diplomatic presence and transfer U.S. forces out of Turkey and into Jordan, Romania, and other regional countries.

Michael Rubin (@Mrubin1971) is a contributor to the Washington Examiner’s Beltway Confidential blog. He is a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute and a former Pentagon official.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Americans, assassination, possible, Turkey

Did #Turkey just annex #Syrian territories? Yes according Turkey’s Interior Minister

January 28, 2018 By administrator

Yes according to #Turkey‘s Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu says he has his own district governors, police chiefs & gendarmerie commanders appointed to #Syrian Azaz, Jarablus & Mare.

Turkish Minister Numan Kurtulmuş likens #Afrin offensive to the nation’s War of Independence and 1915 Gallipoli Campaign, says “Turkey will thwart imperial powers’s game today in the region.

Turkish foreign minister Mevlut Cavusoglu says asks the US to fully disarm Kurdish fighters, withdraw troops from Manbij area to restore lost confidence between #Turkey and the US

#Turkey deploys more firepower and troops on #Syria border as #Afrin offensive enters into second week. Crowd cheering the convoy as they pass through the town go Gölbasi in Adiyaman province.

American pastor Andrew Brunson has been jailed well over a year now, on trumped up charges, denied access to any evidence, if any, just like some 60,000 victims who were summarily and arbitrarily imprisoned in #Turkey in a year or so.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: annex, Syrian, Turkey

SOHR: ‘Turkey supports anything that harms the Kurds’

January 28, 2018 By administrator

As Turkey’s invasion against Kurds in the Afrin region continues, DW spoke with Rami Abdel Rahman, who runs the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. He sees a multifaceted conflict filled with murky alliances.

DW: Turkey’s military offensive against the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG) in Syria has been going on for about a week. What are the developments?

Rami Abdel Rahman: The Turkish military is attacking along 10 corridors north and west of Afrin. Turkey and the Free Syrian Army (FSA), which supports it, are making slow progress because of fierce Kurdish resistance. Over the course of six days, they only conquered two villages and parts of five others. That is not much considering the number and intensity of Turkish airstrikes and Turkey’s statements at the onset of the campaign. In reality, Turkish troops have barely advanced into the Kurdish-controlled enclave of Afrin in northern Syria. In contrast to reports from both warring parties, our sources have confirmed a total of 133 fatalities so far: 47 Kurdish fighters, 51 FSA militants, four Turkish soldiers, 31 civilians killed by Turkish fire and two by Kurdish forces.

The Kurds have declared that they are pulling fighters from the Syrian cities of Raqqa and Deir el-Zour to reinforce their troops. But how is this possible considering that Afrin is a Kurdish enclave that’s separated from other Kurdish-controlled areas?

The only route available leads through territory controlled by the Syrian regime, via two towns north of Aleppo, to be exact. There have been reports claiming Damascus is allowing Kurds to pass its road barricades, provided they are unarmed and traveling as civilians. But my contacts in the area have not noticed an increase in men traveling through the region.

How credible are the YPG’s claims that they are sending dozens of foreign YPG fighters into the battle?

These foreigners predominantly joined to fight the Islamic State (IS). According to what we know, there are no foreign YPG fighters in Afrin. And, even if there were foreigners, they would not change the battle. They only have symbolic value and help generate favorable public opinion across the world for the YPG.

And who is fighting on the Turkish side?

Mainly Arabic and Turkmen FSA fighters from Aleppo, Idlib and Deir el-Zour. There are claims that the Nusra Front has joined the campaign against the YPG. But that’s not true. According to our information, claims that Chechen forces have joined the Turkish side are also false. So far, only Syrians are fighting alongside the Turkish army.

The objective of the FSA was always to topple Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. Why are they are pulling their forces from the embattled Idlib region to join the fight against the Kurds?

That’s because none of the groups is actually fighting for Syria! They are all pursuing some foreign agenda. In this case, they’re following Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s agenda. They have neither fought against IS, nor against the Syrian regime in Deir el-Zour. But now they’ve suddenly joined Turkey’s military operation against the Kurds. Some FSA fighters were forced out of Homs by Syrian troops but are now fighting in Afrin. Last week, Damascus regained control over 320 villages in Idlib province. All fighters affected by this have also moved to Afrin. It’s true that many opposition groups want to exact revenge on the YPG for attacking the local Arab population. We have reported on these attacks. But they were not as severe as Turkish and Qatari media reports made them out to be.

Some observers claim that the Kurds are ready to cede Afrin to Assad to prevent it from falling under Turkish control. How credible is this?

In reality, that’s what the Russians are demanding. They’re putting pressure on the Kurds to hand over control over Afrin to Damascus. Russia wants all regions west of the river Euphrates to be under Syrian control. The Kurds rejected this demand. In response, Russia gave Turkey the go-ahead to attack Kurdish-controlled Afrin. They want to break the Kurdish resistance so they will relinquish control over the region. And the United States is doing nothing to stop this.

Why would Turkey want to help Russia and the Syrian regime? Turkey opposes Assad, after all.

Turkey’s only genuine enemy in Syria is the Kurds. Turkey allowed jihadi fighters to cross its border as early as 2011, as we have repeatedly reported. Turkey supports anything that harms the Kurds. Over a year ago, Turkey withdrew its armed forces from eastern Aleppo, which then was surrounded by President al-Assad’s troops to use them against the YPG and prevent Kurdish-controlled Afrin linking up with other Kurdish areas. By withdrawing its troops from Aleppo, Turkey effectively handed over the city to Damascus.

What can the Kurds now expect?

They’ll fight to the end. They have no other choice. They would have long since given in to Russian pressure if they were willing to do so. There are about 1.1 million civilians in Afrin: 600,000 Kurds and 500,000 Arab refugees. The YPG has about 10,000 fighters in the area.

Rami Abdel Rahman leads the UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which is affiliated with the opposition and relies on a network of activists and informants for its reporting. Many international news organizations and experts deem the SOHR’s reports credible. The critical security situation in Syria, however, often makes it impossible to independently verify this information.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Afrin, Kurd, Turkey, ypg

Terrorist State of #Turkey say US needs to withdraw from #Syria’s Manbij region immediately: Turkish FM

January 27, 2018 By administrator

The United States needs to withdraw from northern Syria’s Manbij region immediately, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu said on Jan. 27.

President Tayyip Erdoğan on Jan. 26 had said Turkish forces would sweep Syrian Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG) militia from the Syrian border and could push all the way east to the frontier with Iraq, including Manbij.

Speaking to reporters, Çavuşoğlu also said Turkey wanted to see concrete steps by the United States to end its support for the YPG militia.

“We want to see more concrete steps rather than words. The U.S. must cut ties with the terrorist organization,” Çavuşoğlu told reporters before a meeting in the Mediterranean province of Antalya.

Ankara said earlier it had been told by U.S. National Security Adviser H.R. McMaster that Washington would not provide the YPG with weapons anymore.

Source: http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/us-needs-to-withdraw-from-syrias-manbij-region-immediately-turkish-fm-126385

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Kurd, Syria, Turkey, U.S

Sonia Mabrouk (CNews) questions Turkey’s ambassador and introduces Armenian genocide

January 26, 2018 By administrator

The excellent CNews journalist, Sonia Mabrouk, on January 25 interviewed Turkey’s ambassador to France, Ismail Hakki Musa, on the Turkish offensive against Kurdish fighters in Syria.

On the possible Syrian civilian casualties caused by Turkey’s attacks, the ambassador woefully misunderstood in reply to the CNews reporter: ” One thing is clear, we are driven by an ancestral desire to protect as much as possible Civilians … “ What Sonia Mabrouk retorted in a parallel with the genocide of the Armenians:” It reminds us of dark hours , “she told him. Ismail Hakki Musa noted the journalist’s skill while not understanding what the Armenian question was doing in the debate. Probably he did not remember what he said a minute ago …

According to the blogger journalist Maxime Azadi “The assessment of a week in Afrin: 59 civilians massacred, 134 wounded. 49 FDS fighters lost their lives. 308 Turkish soldiers and mercenaries killed including four officers and a commander of the mercenaries. 699 shells fired and 191 airstrikes took place, according to the FDS. “This tweet was published on the journalist’s page Friday, January 26 at 12h.

Friday, January 26, 2018,
Jean Eckian © armenews.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: armenian genocide, France, Turkey

Iran calls for immediate halt to Turkish offensive in Syria

January 25, 2018 By administrator

Iran has called for an immediate halt to Turkish military intervention in the Syrian Kurdish enclave of Afrine, the state-run Irna news agency reported.

“Iran hopes that this operation will stop immediately to prevent a worsening of the crisis in the border regions of Turkey and Syria,” said Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Bahram Qasemi.

“A prolonged crisis in Afrine could strengthen (…) terrorist groups in northern Syria,” he added, quoted by Irna.

Iran is an ally of Damascus, who denounced the Ankara offensive.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Afrin, Iran, Turkey

Kurdish YPG rocket hit back at Turkey town Kilis dozen Injured

January 25, 2018 By administrator

More than a dozen people have been wounded when two rockets fired from Syria’s Kurdish-controlled enclave of Afrin struck a Turkish border town, the local governor says.

Governor Mehmet Tekinarslan said that the rockets hit two locations, including a mosque during prayer times, in the city center of Kilis on Wednesday.

At least eight people were wounded at the mosque and another five injured at the second location, he added. Two of the injured people were in critical condition.

Turkish media footage showed security forces clearing the areas of civilians following the attacks.

Several rockets have hit the Turkish border towns of Kilis and Reyhanli in recent days as Ankara presses ahead with its operation against US-backed Kurdish militants in the war-torn Arab country.

On Saturday, rockets fired across the border hit Reyhanli, killing a Syrian national and wounding 46 people. Another five were wounded when rockets hit Kilis.

Turkey launched the so-called Operation Olive Branch in Afrin five days ago in a bid to eliminate the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG), which Ankara views as a terror organization and the Syrian branch of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK).

The YPG forms the backbone of the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), a US-backed anti-Damascus militant group.

The Turkish military said in a statement on Tuesday that at least 260 members of the YPG and the Daesh Takfiri terrorist group had been killed in the Afrin operation. The SDF has also claimed to kill dozens of Turkish forces and allied Free Syrian Army members.

Operation Olive Branch in the Afrin region is Turkey’s second major military intervention in Syria during an unprecedented foreign-backed militancy that broke out in 2011.

In August 2016, Turkey began a unilateral military intervention in northern Syria, code-named Operation Euphrates Shield, sending tanks and warplanes across the border. Ankara claimed that its military campaign was aimed at pushing Daesh from Turkey’s border with Syria and stopping the advance of Kurdish forces, who were themselves fighting Daesh.

Turkey ended its campaign in northern Syria in March 2017, but at the time did not rule out the possibility of yet another act of military offensive inside the Arab country.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Kurd, Turkey, ypg

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