Ankara-backed groups launch offensive against criminal gang in Afrin
ANKARA: Turkey announced a curfew in Syria’s northern city of Afrin as
part of a wide-ranging operation against a rebel faction, the
Al-Sharqiyyah Martyrs Gathering, and its allies who have been accused of
crimes including kidnapping civilians, robbery, extrajudicial
executions and looting.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, the UK-based monitoring group,
announced: “Turkish forces and the factions closed the roads leading to
Afrin city and surrounded several neighborhoods of the city, while the
heaviest clashes are concentrated in the middle of Afrin city in
Al-Villat Street.”
The Observatory said at least 25 men were killed in clashes.
The operation was reportedly conducted under the supervision of the Turkish army, which provided logistic support.
The Observatory also told of a sweeping search campaign by the Turkish
special task forces in Afrin, along with information about “preparations
for raiding the headquarters of Al-Sharqiyyah Gathering, most of whose
fighters are descended from Deir Ezzor province, which handed over its
weapons days ago after its objection to the Turkish orders.”
Al Sharqiyyah headquarters are in the Al-Filat and Al-Mahmoudiya areas, and the Al-Nayrouz crossroads in Afrin.
Turkey launched Operation Olive Branch in January this year and
concluded it in April with the support of the Free Syrian Army to clear
the region of Syrian Kurdish YPG militants, which it sees as a terror
group.
In the wake of Operation Olive Branch, thousands of people are thought
to be returning to the city, while trade and economic activities, as
well as educational and health services, have begun to return to normal
under the supervision of a 1,700-strong police force which has been
trained in Turkey to patrol the streets.
Therefore, maintaining order and security by rooting out lawlessness in a
city whose population has reached 200,000 from 50,000 is crucially
important for Ankara to prove its success.
Nicholas Heras, Middle East security fellow at the Center for a New
American Security in Washington, said Turkey may be a victim of its own
success in Afrin.
“Turkey’s rapid conquest of Afrin was the result of the Turkish
military’s competence, not because Turkey’s Syrian partner forces were
effective on their own,” he told Arab News.
According to Heras, the Syrian partner force that Turkey mobilized to
run Afrin is divided among different groups, and many of these groups
act with a mercenary mentality because they stay in Afrin for the money
that Turkey gives them.
“Many of the Syrian groups in Afrin are not capable of stopping the
YPG-led insurgency there, and are divided among themselves about which
group will profit the most from their partnership with Turkey,” he
noted.
With partners like this, Heras thinks that the Turkish military will
have to take a different approach, which is to have a firmer handle on
Afrin.
“This in many ways defeats the purpose of having Syrian partner forces
on the ground, because they are supposed to do most of the work, not
create problems that makes it more painful for Turkey to control Afrin,”
he said.
The Observatory claims that Turkey’s ongoing operation against the
groups in Afrin has been supported by the Hamza Division, the Sultan
Murad Division, the Al-Sham Corps and the 3rd Corps.
For some people the operation is against the irregularities and the
corruption of Al-Sharqiyyah Martyrs Gathering, composed of more than 800
members. Some local reports claim that the real motivation behind the
Turkish operation is linked to the fact that this group is disobeying
Ankara’s orders not to fight against the regime forces.
For this narrative, this operation was launched for keeping Turkish proxies on the ground under control.
Last July, Al-Sharqiyyah Martyrs Gathering, led by its commander named
“Abu Khula,” incurred Turkey’s anger for launching an unauthorized
attack on the Syrian Arab Army in the village of Tadef in the northern
Aleppo countryside and just south of the Turkish-held city of Al-Bab.
The attack was a violation of the Russian-Turkish-Iranian de-escalation
agreement in northern Syria.
Mete Sohtaoglu, an independent researcher on the Middle East, said his
local sources confirmed around 40 deaths after an intense offensive on
Sunday.
“The remaining fighters of Al-Sharqiyyah will lay down arms and will
return to Idlib with their families,” he told Arab News. “Turkey is
making sure the peace in Afrin is not compromised.
“Such operations have been conducted occasionally in the past, but this
time the final goal was to dissolve this group. I assume that all rebel
groups in Afrin will be liquefied soon and brought under the auspices of
the new Syrian National Army umbrella group,” Sohtaoglu said.
Although Al-Sharqiyyah announced in late October that it was disbanding
voluntarily, it has never implemented this decision and has continued to
carry out insubordination and crimes.
This operation is considered the first all-out campaign waged by pro-Ankara rebel groups against another faction in the city.
The security operation is not restricted to Afrin, but also covers other
areas of the Euphrates Shield in the rebel-held territory of eastern
Aleppo that was captured by Turkish-backed groups.
https://www.geezgo.com/sps/47337
Join Geezgo for free. Use Geezgo's end-to-end encrypted Chat with your Closenets (friends, relatives, colleague etc) in personalized ways.>>
No comments