Turkey-allied militias step up violations in Syria's Afrin
Militias allied to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan keep committing crimes against Syrians, amid mysterious silence from the international community.
They
especially do this in the northern Syrian city of Afrin which is predominantly
inhabited by Kurds.
The
pro-Erdogan militias extort money from the residents of the city and
arbitrarily arrest locals. This comes as Erdogan keeps back financial support to
the militias while his country's economy continues to collapse.
The
Center for Documenting Turkish Violations in Northern Syria has so far
documented the disappearance of 33 people in Afrin since the beginning of
December.
Organized
looting has become a norm in the city along with the confiscation of the homes
of locals. The pro-Erdogan militias also keep cut off olive trees and take
locals hostage to demand ransoms from their families.
On
December 1, Turkish intelligence officers kidnapped three native Kurdish
citizens, according to the local human rights group.
The
Suleyman Shah militia imposed a tax on local Kurds. The tax amounts to three
galloons of olive oil for each family.
The
same militia also forced one of the locals to pay $1,500 in fines for managing
assets that are registered in his mother's name.
The
Center for Documenting Turkish Violations in Northern Syria has documented the
detention of 7,083 Afrin locals since the beginning of Turkish occupation of
the city.
It
said 1,041 of those detainees were subjected to torture, including 133 who died
of torture.



