Erdogan’s militias cut off water to Syrians despite corona
Since the beginning of the Syrian crisis in March 2011, Turkish
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan found an opportunity to interfere and exploit
the popular protests in his favor, as he worked to penetrate the war-torn country.
To achieve its expansionist ambitions in Arab, Islamic and
African countries, the Turkish regime seeks to exploit terrorism for its
benefit and to provide all support to extremist groups. Just as Ankara worked
to plunder Syria’s natural resources such as oil, it also worked to steal the
waters of the Euphrates River by building dams that would cause a humanitarian
catastrophe for Syrians.
As part of his plot for Syria, Erdogan trained and armed
terrorist groups in Turkey and then sent them to Syria to sabotage and
destabilize the country with the hope of toppling the regime of Syrian
President Bashar al-Assad and replacing it with another that is loyal to the
Turks and abides with their orders.
Ankara has also worked to finance terrorist groups, supply
them with weapons, and facilitate their entry into and out of Syria across the
Turkish border. It has also worked to transform northern Syria’s Idlib into a
gathering area for terrorists under the supervision of Turkish intelligence,
which continues to wreak havoc in the region.
Erdogan's intelligence sought years ago to turn Idlib into a
terrorist outpost it could control under the pretext of confronting the Kurds,
using the area to penetrate Syria and threaten the security of other nearby governorates,
such as Aleppo, Latakia, Homs and Hama.
Turkey opened its borders to terrorist elements from all
corners of the earth, and it opened its airports and border crossings to bring
them into Syria to fight alongside ISIS.
In March, statements by the Turkish president revealed his
ambitions for Syrian oil and exposed his false claims of concern for the
Syrians and the territorial integrity of the country, as he announced that he
had asked Russian President Vladimir Putin to participate in the management of
oil fields in Deir Ezzor in eastern Syria instead of the Kurdish-led forces.
Erdogan said at the time that if Putin provided economic
support, Turkey could build the infrastructure to extract oil in order to “help
destroyed Syria stand on its feet.”
He added, “Instead of the terrorists who benefit here, we
will have the opportunity to rebuild Syria from the revenues of this (oil).
This would also show who is seeking to protect the unity of Syria and who is
seeking to seize it.”
Syria’s oil reserves amount to about two billion barrels, with
the largest concentration in Deir Ezzor, where Erdogan was referring to. Most
of the declared oil fields are located near the borders with Iraq and Turkey.
To put pressure on the Kurds, Syrian armed groups
cooperating with Ankara cut water to more than 500,000 Syrians in Hasaka and
Ras al-Ain via the Aluk water station that they control.
Turkey is working to punish these people and make them
thirsty in order to put pressure on the Kurds and provoke anger against them,
which prompted the United Nations International Children's Fund (UNICEF) to
warn that hundreds of thousands of people in northeastern Syria are facing an
increased risk of contracting the Covid-19 corona virus due to the interruption
in the water supply.
In addition to its aggressive and retaliatory practices, the
Turkish government has exploited the corona pandemic to transfer weapons to
terrorists in Idlib, Afrin and other areas under the cover of humanitarian aid.




