Erdogan violates agreement with Putin to reinvigorate ISIS
 
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan continues to provoke
the international community by violating international laws and agreements that
he concluded with Russian President Vladimir Putin regarding the buffer zone in
northern Syria, specifically in Idlib, where he used the method of displaying
muscles and illegally imposing force in that region after a military convoy
entered the buffer zone in Idlib, according to reports from the Syrian Arab
News Agency (SANA) and the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. SANA added that
the Turkish military convoy crossed into the de-escalation zone from the Kafr Losin
border crossing north of Idlib on Monday, August 10.
Persistent violations
The convoy consisted of more than 20 trucks carrying
logistical and military supplies, bringing the number of Erdogan's vehicles
that have entered Syrian territory since the start of the new ceasefire to
5,300 vehicles, in addition to thousands of soldiers, according to the Syrian Observatory.
Despite the agreement with Russia to de-escalate in northern
Syria, Erdogan has persisted with his violations, increasing the number of
Turkish trucks and military vehicles to more than 8,600 since February 2.
These vehicles carry tanks, carriers, soldiers, armored
vehicles, mobile guard booths and military radars, and the number of Turkish
soldiers who have deployed in Idlib and Aleppo during that period reached more
than 11,550.
While Turkey continues to transfer forces to Syria, the
pro-Turkish terrorist groups are also continuing to violate the rights of
citizens, robbing shops and homes and forcing citizens to pay royalties.
According to the Observatory, the pro-Turkish Sultan Murad Division confiscated
the remaining properties in the villages of Leilan and Arbaeen in the
countryside of Tal Tamer.
ISIS
Turkish forces
launched a major military offensive in northern Syria amid international
criticism and fears that the attack could cause a revival of ISIS, which was
defeated at the beginning of the year by the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF).
The Syrian Observatory
confirmed that Turkey’s terrorist attacks widen the field for ISIS to spread
again in Syria.
Turkey and its
terrorist militias took control of Kurdish areas, including a 120-km long border
area, since the start of Ankara’s military operation in northern Syria, which
caused hundreds of deaths and displaced 300,000 people, according to the Syrian
Observatory.
The Observatory stated
that Turkey used armed terrorist groups to invade northern Syria in exchange
for facilitating kidnappings, arrests, thefts, looting and plundering against
the remaining people of Afrin and areas northwest of Aleppo.
          
     
                               
 
 


