Amnesty accuses Turkey of ‘war crimes’ in Syria

Turkish forces and Syrian rebel allies have
committed “war crimes” including summary executions during their offensive in
northeast Syria, Amnesty International said Friday.
Amnesty accused Ankara’s forces of “serious
violations and war crimes, summary killings and unlawful attacks” in the
operation launched on October 9.
There was no immediate response from Ankara, which
announced a suspension of the attacks late Thursday, but it says all possible
measures have been taken to avoid civilian casualties.
Ankara’s operation aims to remove the Kurdish
People’s Protection Units (YPG) from areas near its border in northern Syria.
The offensive has killed at least 72 civilians,
according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
“Turkish military forces and a coalition of
Turkey-backed Syrian armed groups have displayed a shameful disregard for
civilian life,” Amnesty said.
The charges were based on the testimony of 17 people
including medical, aid and rescue workers, journalists and displaced people, as
well as video footage, it said.
“The information gathered provides damning evidence
of indiscriminate attacks in residential areas, including attacks on a home, a
bakery and a school, carried out by Turkey and allied Syrian armed groups,”
Amnesty said.
Kumi Naidoo, the organization’s secretary general,
said Turkish forces and their allies had “displayed an utterly callous
disregard for civilian lives.”
The report included testimony of a Kurdish Red
Crescent worker who said he removed bodies from the wreckage of a Turkish air
strike near a school in Salhiye on October 12.
“I couldn’t tell if they were boys or girls because
their corpses were black. They looked like charcoal,” the rescue worker was
quoted as saying.
It also said Kurdish female politician Hevrin Khalaf
and her bodyguard were summarily executed by members of the Syrian National
Army, a Turkish-funded and -trained group.
At least two more executions of Kurdish fighters
were confirmed, while Turkey’s Syrian allies had kidnapped two employees of a
local medical organization, Amnesty said.