Killed and tortured: Erdogan's army targets Syrian refugees across the border
Syrians have been repeatedly killed by Turkey’s Gendarmerie
border guards, as the regime of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan continues
to strip the Syrians of their rights, amounting to crimes punishable by
international law and considered war crimes.
The number of Syrian refugees killed by Turkish soldiers
increased to 463 by the end of June, including 86 children under the age of 18
and 59 women, according to the Violations Documentation Center in Northern
Syria.
Most observers had assumed that the Turkish policy towards
displaced Syrians was the best among the countries of the region, as it
provided them with basic services such as education and health for free, although
it did not reach the level of the Europeans in dealing with refugees.
However, according to the testimonies of human rights
activists, displaced Syrians and detainees of other nationalities trying to
cross the border are discriminated against and treated poorly in Turkish border
guard prisons, policies that can be described as systematic.
Those detained by the Turkish border guards did not receive
any meals for two days of their detention and only drank faucet water from the
bathrooms, while the prison guards took turns insulting and beating them for
trivial reasons such as looking at the guards.
In the event that the displaced are not subjected to
beatings or insults, they are treated as forced laborers. The Turkish soldiers
choose young, strong-bodied detainees to do manual work at the border outposts,
such as carrying equipment, transporting dirt or cleaning the floors.
A report by the Violations Documentation Center in Northern
Syria also confirmed that the number of detainees wounded by gunshots or
assaulted by the Turkish border guards rose to 494 people.
The Violations Documentation Center in Northern Syria was
also able to collect data in June that included the killing of a child and the
wounding of 10 others who were trying to cross the Turkish border to flee from
the ongoing war in Idlib and Aleppo. An elderly man also lost his life as a
result of his injury after Turkish forces bombed his house in Tal Rifaat.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitored the
Turkish Gendarmerie torturing eight Syrian citizens from Idlib, beating them
brutally for four consecutive hours before taking them back to Syrian territory
the next day.
The Turkish Gendarmerie’s crimes violate international laws,
conventions and guidelines aimed at protecting refugees that were adopted in
1951 when the United Nations General Assembly approved the Convention Relating
to the Status of Refugees.
In the event of an international armed conflict, citizens of
a country fleeing hostilities and settling in the enemy's country are to enjoy
protection under the Fourth Geneva Convention, on the basis that they are
foreigners residing in the territory of a party to the conflict. This
convention requires the host country to provide refugees with preferential
treatment and to refrain from treating them on the basis of their nationality
without enjoying the protection of any government.
The Second Protocol (Article 17) also prohibits the forcible
transfer of civilians, as it is not permissible to order their deportation
except on an exceptional basis, which was stipulated in Article 7 of the
Statute of the International Criminal Court, which considers the forcible
transfer of a population as a crime against humanity.
As for ensuring the protection of women refugees, it
requires not only adherence to the 1951 Convention and its protocols, but also
commitment to other international instruments that provide a framework of
international human rights standards for carrying out protection and assistance
activities related to women refugees.



