01/26/2015

Vigil in front of the Federal Chancellory, 12.01.2015

Our human rights protest in pictures

Göttingen/Berlin
On Monday, 12/01/2015, Angela Merkel received the Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu. We took the opportunity to have a vigil in front of the Federal German Chancellor. We demanded an end of the support of radical Islamists in Syria by the Turkish government and humanitarian aid supplies for the distressed Kurdish and Christian civilians.

 

According to research by the STP, Turkey is a transit country for jihadists from all over the world who are trying to get through to Syria or Iraq – and, at the same time, a retreat area for weary Islamist fighters – and wounded fighters are treated in Turkish hospitals. Their pay is transferred through Turkish banks.

 

"In the Syrian Kurdish border town Kobani, the remaining Kurdish population has now been besieged by IS-Islamists for almost four months. Ankara allows only infrequent aid supplies for the besieged who are desperately trying to defend themselves against attacks. Only 160 Kurdish Peshmerga fighters from Iraqi Kurdistan were allowed to help defend Kobani. The Kurds are in desperate need of a permanent and safe corridor to Kobani. Also, the border crossings to the other two predominantly Kurdish enclaves Afrin and Cezire must be opened for humanitarian aid supplies," says the STP.

 

In Afrin and Cezire in the north-west and in the north-east of Syria, there is hardly any bread, let alone baby food or adequate medication. The humanitarian situation of the people living there – about three million Kurds, Christian Assyrians/Aramaeans and other minorities – is getting worse. Just like Kobani, the two regions are largely cut off from the outside world. Both Islamists fighters as well as troops of the Syrian government have set up blockades in the south. At the same time, the Turkish troops who are blocking access in the north rarely let aid convoys pass through.

 


Our human rights protest in pictures:

 

 


Dr. Kamal Sido, head of STP's Middle East department, is available for further questions: Tel. 0551 499 06 18 oder nahost@gfbv.de.

 

 


 

 

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