Archbishop of Aleppo condemns
Turkish military offensive in northeast Syria
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| Civilians carry their belongings as they flee amid Turkish bombardments on Syria's northeastern town of Ras-al- Ain (AFP) |
The Archbishop of Aleppo in Syria expresses dread following
a Turkish offensive against Kurdish fighters in northeast Syria.
By Linda Bordoni
The news on Wednesday afternoon that Turkish armed forces
and Syrian rebel allies had launched a military attack “east of the Euphrates”
has raised fears of a worsening humanitarian crisis and more civilian victims.
In an interview with SIR news agency, Archbishop
Jean-Clement Jeanbart said he fears “a slaughter and many innocent deaths”.
Reacting to Turkey’s decision to launch an attack on Syrian
territory held by Kurdish-led forces with the aim of creating a “safe zone”
cleared of Kurdish militias, Jeanbart, who is the Greek-Melkite Archbishop of
Aleppo, said that although the Turkish President has called it “Operation Peace
Spring”, it is “another source of violence we would rather have done without.”
“It is terrible,” he said.
Commenting on the Turkish President’s declared intent to
“prevent the creation of a terror corridor” on the border, Jeanbart said this
is concerning because it will in fact lead to the creation of a
extra-territorial pocket within another nation.
The 40 kilometer-wide “safe-zone” would run along the entire
500 kilometer-long border between Syria and Turkey.
One of the most resource-rich areas in Syria
What’s more, Jeanbart noted “this area would occupy one of
the most resource-rich parts of Syria, with water, oil, gas and fertile land.”
He also commented on Turkey’s purported aim to transfer some
2 million Syrian refugees currently hosted by Turkey into the so-called
“safe-zone,” a move he said that would risk causing a “demographic earthquake,
displacing Kurds from their homes and lands and creating the conditions for
serious internal tensions.”
“It would be inhumane,” he said, and he expressed his belief
that the conditions for an agreement between the parts that would safeguard the
different requests put forward, still exist.
Political solution
Instead, Jeanbart continued, “A military solution has been
chosen” and this leads to “the risk of a real massacre with many innocent
deaths.”
Rather than yield, Jeanbart said, the Kurds will fight until
the end.
“I hope that dialogue can be resumed in order to find a
peaceful solution, a compromise that guarantees safety for all parties
involved,” he concluded.

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