Turkey rejects allegations against Syrian opposition

Turkey on Sept. 18 dismissed allegations of human rights violations leveled against Syrian opposition.

"We categorically reject both the baseless allegations of human rights violations claimed against the Syrian opposition, which operate on the ground to combat terrorism and ensure the return of Syrian refugees, and concerning our country in relation to them, as well as the groundless criticisms by the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights' (OHCHR) leveled against Turkey on the basis of the said allegations," said a Foreign Ministry statement.

"We note that the periodic report of the U.N. Independent International Commission of Inquiry (CoI) on Syria for January-June 2020 established that the Syrian regime and the so-called 'Syrian Democratic Forces' which is affiliated with the PKK/YPG terrorist organization committed human rights violations amounting to crimes against humanity and war crimes against civilians," it added.

The statement emphasized that links between the PKK's Syrian offshoot YPG and the so-called Syrian Democratic Forces had once again been clearly demonstrated in this latest report of the CoI.

"However, failure to name PKK/PYD as the perpetrator of the terror attacks against civilians across northern Syria, which is known to everybody, is a major shortcoming."

The statement condemned the OHCHR's press release for failing to mention the Syrian regime and PKK/YPG, which it said are the true culprits of the reported violations.

"Our views and objections regarding the report will be transmitted to the U.N. in the strongest terms," it underlined.

Since the eruption of the bloody civil war in Syria in 2011, thousands of people died and millions fled the country or were displaced...

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