Turkish Opposition MP Calls for Probe into Kurdish Women Being Kidnapped, Sent to Libya
Turkish opposition
lawmaker Tulay Hatımoğulları Oruç of the Peoples' Democratic
Party (HDP) presented a parliamentary inquiry to Turkish Foreign Minister
Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu, raising questions on the
kidnapping of hundreds of Kurdish women and girls by Turkish-backed factions in
Afrin, northern Syria.
According Oruç some
of the kidnapped women were taken to western Libya for sexual enslavement by
the leaders of Syrian militias.
This coincided with
Çavuşoğlu and his
counterpart at the Libyan Government of National Accord (GNA), Mohamed Taher
Siala, discussing bilateral relations, the latest situation after the ceasefire
in Libya and the UN initiative to find a solution to the Libyan crisis.
Oruç launched
parliamentary movements to investigate the shocking testimonies published by
Kurdish women who escaped from Afrin during the Turkish offensive in 2018, and
were raped and sold as slaves—some of whom were transferred to Libya.
“Are you investigating the claims that girls and women from Afrin were
sent to Libya as slaves? Is your ministry aware of the sexual assaults in Afrin’s
camps and prisons? Will it take the necessary measures to address these rights
violations? Will it carry out coordinated activities with international
organizations in this regard?” Oruç asked Çavuşoğlu during her
intervention in parliament.
Testimonies of
survivors from the Afrin region revealed the presence of hospitals in areas
controlled by Ankara-backed factions which were full of the corpses of
kidnapped women and girls.
These testimonies
have been documented by the Missing Afrin Women Project, which tracks the
disappearance of Kurdish women and girls in Afrin since 2018.
More than 1,000 women
and girls are believed to be missing in Afrin alone after Turkey’s two-month
Operation Olive Branch, which expelled the Kurdish People’s Protection Units
(YPG) from the region two years ago.



