Donate to Links
Click on Links masthead to clear previous query from search box
Recent comments
- Russian imperialism
1 week 3 days ago - response to Amazon Watch's reply to my article
4 weeks 21 hours ago - Correcting bad research & complete falsehoods about AmazonWatch
4 weeks 2 days ago - Is Russia imperialist?
4 weeks 4 days ago - already a savage strike.
5 weeks 4 days ago - The credibility of AI is zero
6 weeks 21 hours ago - The credibility of AI is zero
13 weeks 6 days ago - I agree with the comment (by
18 weeks 3 days ago - "the last thing Europe needs
19 weeks 22 hours ago - Independence declaration to be passed on Monday
19 weeks 22 hours ago
YPG statement in reaction to Amnesty report
Read more about the Kurdish struggle
18th Oct 2015
Amnesty
International Report, published on 12 October 2015 and titled, "We Had
Nowhere Else to Go – Forced Displacement and Demolitions in Northern
Syria" is contradictory and puts the credibility of the organisation at
stake.
Preface
1.
The Basic Argument to Respond
1.1.
The content of the report contradicts its title, and this is enough to prove its
invalidity and to call for the prosecution of its authors.
1.2.
The accusations in the report contradict Rome Statute of the International
Criminal Court.
2.
Supporting Arguments
2.1.
Hurling unsubstantiated accusations without sufficient evidence.
2.2.
Relying only on the words of the people, who are unsure of witnessing the
events, without verifying their accounts.
2.3.
Some of the eyewitnesses in the report are members of terrorist organisations,
and have been involved in criminal activities and are part of this conflict.
2.4.
YPG's statements deny the content of the Amnesty report.
2.5.
During the preparation of their report, the authors of the Amnesty report were
hosted by political parties hostile to the YPG and the Self-Administration in
Rojava.
Preamble
On
12th October 2015, Amnesty International published a report, titled "We
Had Nowhere Else to Go – Forced Displacement and Demolitions in Northern
Syria" in reference to the Self-Administration in what is known in Kurdish
as Rojava. According to the report, Amnesty International researchers worked in
Rojava after obtaining the necessary permission from the relevant authorities
in the administration, and they were free to conduct their filed work without
being hassled by the authorities. The Amnesty report is based on testimonies
obtained from local villagers, who were allegedly subjected to "forced
displacement" and their houses were "demolished", and on
evidence gathered from satellite images. However, the report contains fallacies
since the testimonies of the individuals interviewed by Amnesty International
were incorrect and contradictory to the facts and evidence, widely available
and easily accessible to everyone. In this official statement, we will mention
some of these flagrant fallacies that put the credibility of the report and
Amnesty International at stake.
Page
5 – Paragraph 1 – Line 3
The
use of the term "forced displacement" is arbitrary without
considering the cases in which this terms should be used according to Article 7
(d) of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, which clearly
states that "Deportation or forcible transfer of population' means forced
displacement of the persons concerned by expulsion or other coercive acts from
the area in which they are lawfully present, without grounds permitted under
international law." Comparing and contrasting the Amnesty report with
YPG's statements, it is clear that the use of the term "forced
displacement" is in sharp contrast to Article 7 of the Statute. Accordingly,
the report's claim of a "war crime" committed by the YPG is a false
accusation.
Page
6 – Paragraph 4 – Line 3
"The
deliberate demolition of civilian homes described in this report is unlawful
under international humanitarian law, which prohibits the destruction or
seizure of the property of an adversary, unless required by imperative military
necessity."
For
the past few years, numerus reports have clearly indicated that the area has
been witnessing armed clashes and the use of heavy weaponry by all belligerent parties,
including the Syrian regime which attacked most of the areas mentioned in the
report using explosive barrels and Scud missiles, causing destruction in the
nearby villages.
Page
8 – Paragraph 4 – Line 6
"IS
[the Islamic State] has been responsible for serious violations of
international humanitarian law, including war crimes, in areas under the
control of the Autonomous Administration including indiscriminate shelling,
targeted attacks on civilians, torture and killing of detainees including civilians
– including children – and captured fighters, unlawful restrictions on
life-saving assistance, and mass forced displacement."
This
paragraph clearly shows that the area witnessed armed clashes and that IS'
indiscriminate shelling was responsible for the destruction of villages and the
mass forced displacement.
Page
10 – Paragraph 1
"Residents
said that the village came under the control of the Free Syrian Army (FSA), an
armed opposition group, in February 2013. A local Arab official from the Tel
Hamees countryside said that the YPG first clashed with the FSA and other
non-state armed groups in the Tel Hamees countryside in December 2013, and that
the biggest confrontation between the FSA and the YPG took place in the village
of Husseiniya in February 2014.3 The official said that at that time, a number
of armed groups, including Ahrar al-Sham, Liwa' 114, Forsan al-Sunna, and a
group affiliated with IS forced the YPG to retreat."
Our
YPG units did not enter the village of Husseiniya in 2014, which was under the
terrorists' control. Instead, they withdrew from the outskirt of the village
after completing their combat mission, which was named "deterrence and
dispersal operation." The paragraph also clearly indicates that the area
was witnessing armed clashes between different groups – clashes that are enough
to destroy any village.
Page
11 –Paragraphs 4 & 5
"In
January 2015 IS took complete control of the village. Several local residents
said that none of the locals was affiliated with IS, but one resident said that
in fact three men from the village were."
"Mariam
a mother of seven living in the village, said that four or five homes were
destroyed by IS when they took control of the village."
The
first paragraph is a clear reference to the involvement of some locals,
affiliated with IS, in military operations against the YPG, and therefore they
were legitimate targets in accordance with Article 7 (d) of the Rome Statute of
the International Criminal Court.
The
second paragraph shows the involvement of IS in demolishing houses. There is no
doubt that in cases of military engagement, the population would not stand
waiting, but will leave voluntarily, fearing for their security and safety.
Page
11 & 12 – Last Paragraph & Paragraph 1
"We
left before the YPG entered and returned in the beginning of March 2015. When
we came back we saw our homes were demolished... We don't know who did
it..."
This
statement clearly shows that the so-called 'eyewitness testimonies' were merely
based on assumptions without witnessing the actual events.
Page
12 – Paragraph 4
"...
We fled at the beginning of the clashes ..."
This
statement clearly indicates that the migration process was not forced but was
on a voluntary basis.
Page
13 – Last Paragraph
"....he
said he believed the demolition may have been in retaliation for the
bombing."
This
paragraph is another example showing that eyewitness testimonies were based on
assumptions rather than seeing the actual events.
Page
14 – Paragraph 1
"Amnesty
International collected information regarding the forced displacement of
residents of eight other villages in areas under the control of the Autonomous
Administration. Amnesty International researchers visited four of these towns
and villages from which residents were displaced, speaking with a number of
local residents."
This
statement is contradictory – speaking with residents who were forcibly
displaced and still live in their villages. Similarly the statement shows that
Amnesty International researchers relied on people's assumption rather than
real eyewitness testimonies.
Page
14 – Paragraph 3 – Lines 4, 5, 8 & 9
"....how
they were forcibly displaced from their homes by fighters who they believed to
be members of the YPG."
"Villagers
told Amnesty International that they believed they were being punished
collectively because some villagers were members of IS or supported IS."
These
paragraphs also show that the so-called 'eyewitnesses' did not in fact see the
actual events. Furthermore, the report refers to a village called al-Maghat,
which does not exist and it is one of the southern suburbs of Suluk, which in
turn was a military zone under the control of IS. Suluk was therefore the first
line of defence for Tel Abbyad and IS military base. The majority of the houses
in Suluk are still filled with bombs, left behind by IS before being defeated
and expelled from the town.
Page
19 – Paragraph 1 – Lines 6, 7, 8 &9
"...
After a week three men came around 12pm. They had shaved beards and spoke
Arabic. They did not look like they were from the YPG. They were wearing green
uniforms. They told us that we had until 3pm the same day to leave but we told
them what we told the ones before them."
This
paragraph also demonstrates the lack of credibility of the so-called
'eyewitnesses' their testimonies were used in this report – 'eyewitnesses' who
are not sure of the identity of the fighters who threatened them and asked them
to leave.
Page
19 – Last Paragraph
"Another
resident, a man displaced from a nearby village, told Amnesty International
that the YPG shot in the direction of two children when they approached an area
bordering both the village and Suluk. Amnesty International spoke to the
children, who confirmed the story."
There
is an apparent contradiction in this text: speaking to children after being
shot. Similarly, Amnesty International researchers visited villages whose
residents were allegedly forcibly displaced and were still residents in their
villages.
Page
21 – Paragraph 3 – Lines 2, 3, & 4
"Journalists
have reported that the YPG displaced the Turkmen on 6 July 2015 and have
identified some of the displaced persons by name."
In
this section, Amnesty International relied on a photographic report, published
on Siraj Press website, which belongs to the Syrian Revolution General
Commission associated with the National Coalition for Syrian Revolution and
Opposition Forces. The report includes the names of some families who were
allegedly displaced by the YPG. However, the person who documented this report
is named, Anwar Al Katav, who was the commander of an Islamic battalion and was
involved in deporting Kurds and looting their properties in Tel Abbyad and its
surrounding villages. He is currently an employee of the Syrian temporary
government in Turkey.
Page
24 – Paragraph 3 – Lines 2 & 3
".....at
which point they left the village for one week while clashes between the YPG
and other armed groups were happening in the area."
This
paragraph clearly demonstrates that armed clashes took place in the reported
areas, which normally lead to destruction of both mud and concrete houses as a
result of the use of heavy weaponry and aerial bombardment.
Page
26 – Last Paragraph – Lines 1, 2 & 3
"Ahmad,
a Ras al-Ayn resident, told Amnesty International that one of his three sons
was a fighter with the FSA's Farouq Brigade in Ras al-Ayn, which began fighting
the YPG in Ras al-Ayn in 2013."
This
paragraph demonstrates that some locals were involved in military operations
against the YPG. That made them a legitimate target in a war zone. Therefore,
questioning and detaining individuals suspected of assisting the enemy are not
considered a war crime.
Page
32 – Paragraph 1 – Lines 3, 4 & 5
"International
humanitarian law also prohibits the displacement of civilians during
non-international armed conflicts except for their own security or for
imperative military reasons."
In
the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, the statement
"unless the security of the civilians involved or imperative military
reasons so demand" shows that there are exceptions to the rules and all
evidence presented in the Amnesty report indicate that were inevitable "imperative
military reasons." Therefore, the Amnesty report contradicts the evidence
it represents deliberately ignoring the "exception" clause in the
Rome Statute.
With
regard to the research in the Amnesty report, we will review some of the points
which prove that the report was written in an unprofessional manner, driven by
a particular party, in order to discredit the Self-Administration and the YPG:
1.
Al Hosseinieh Village
In
its report, Amnesty International claims that it visited Al Hosseinieh Village
which is located near the town of Tel Hamis in early August this year and that
the villagers had told them that the YPG was responsible for the demolition of
90 houses. In addition, according to 'locals' who were interviewed by Amnesty
International, Tel Hamis fell to the opposition group, called the 'Free Army'
during February 2013, and according to 'local Arab officials' in Tel Hamis, the
YPG clashed with the 'Free Syrian Army' and other armed groups on the outskirts
of Tel Hamis in December 2013. The 'local official' also adds that the largest
of these confrontations occurred between the YPG and the 'Free Syrian Army' in
February 2014 inside Al Hosseinieh Village – a statement that is also supported
in the Amnesty report by a woman called Farah from the same village, who
confirmed that she was present during the armed clashes between the YPG and the
'Free Syrian Army', which led to the destructions of some the houses in the
village in February 2014. However, this statement is untrue and contradicts the
facts. The armed clashes between the YPG and extremist groups in Tel Hamis and
its surrounding areas began on 28 December 2013 and ended on 06 January 2014
without getting access to Al Hosseinieh Village and an official YPG statement
was released then, which called the operation "deterrence and
dispersion." We can therefore conclude that the two above-mentioned
statements in Amnesty International report concerning Al Hosseinieh Village are
far from the truth. As for the battle that took place in February, it was
confined to the town of Tel Brak and not Tel Hamis. The YPG military operation
in Tel Brak, called, "the loyalty to the martyrs of Tel Brak and Tel
Hamis" was against al Qaeda-affiliated groups and the YPG issued a
statement about the operation at that time.
2.
Hammam Al Turkman Village
In
the report, Amnesty International claims that it has visited Hammam Al Turkman
Village nearby the town of Suluk, where Amnesty International researchers
interviewed locals. One witness said that there were 1400 Turkmen families in
the village and 1000 Turkmen families according to another witness. These
figures, however, contradict the real figures. Hammam Al Turkman Village has
more than 1500 families with a population of up to 15000 people – figures
contradicting what have been reported by 'witnesses' in the Amnesty report,
which indicates that those were bogus 'witnesses' and were not from the
village. Furthermore, a meeting between the elders of Hammam Al Turkman Village
and the military leadership of the YPG took place on 1 September 2015 in the
town of Tel Abbyad, during which the elders submitted a list of 79 people from
the village who were member of IS and left the area following their defeat. The
elders asked the military leadership of the YPG to prohibit those IS-affiliated
villagers from returning back to their village. Other families are still
residing in the village and any media news agency or impartial INGOs, including
Amnesty International, can visit the village and meet local residents and the
YPG will provide security and protection for the delegation.
The
Amnesty report accuses the YPG of "deporting Turkmen population" on
06 July 2015, based on news reports and written by a 'journalist' called Ghadaf
Rajeh and publish on Siraj Press website, which is an unprofessional website
and well-known for its links to the Syrian Coalition, which in turn hostile to
the Self-Administration and the YPG. Unlike the Amnesty report which accuses
the YPG of deporting Turkmens, the reports on Siraj Press website accuse the
YPG of deporting Arabs from their villages. This contradiction raises questions
about the integrity of Amnesty International reporters and their personal
interests in forging facts.
Summary
The
Amnesty report accuses the YPG of certain violations that amount to "war
crimes." However, the report is a far cry from reality and does not take
into account the complex reality of war. The authors of the report did not
mention the atrocities committed by IS and its affiliates following their defeat
in the region. Therefore, the Amnesty report is arbitrary, biased
unprofessional and politicised, which does not commensurate with the
organisation's purpose.
In
addition, the report will greatly contribute to deepening of ethnic tensions as
it portrays the ongoing conflict as sectarian war between the Kurds and Arabs,
which is a dangerous and immoral issue that puts the credibility of Amnesty
International and its researchers at stake. The reality on the ground is
completely different and the area enjoys a peaceful coexistence among different
ethnic and religious components.
The
area that the report focuses on, and claims to be destroyed, was an area that
witnessed intense fighting between the YPG and IS, during which heavy weaponry
were used and street fight took place. It is the same area that had been
previously controlled by various militant groups such Jabhat Al Nusra, several
units of the Free Syrian Army and IS. These successive groups used terrorist
strategies such as planting improvised explosive devices, mines, car bombs,
suicide bombers and booby-trap houses. It is well-known in military that these
tactics are the deadliest and most dangerous terrorist methods of combat in
terms of the extent of destruction and the severity of their impacts on the
lives of civilians. Currently, there are an estimated 16000 landmines in the
area between Tel Hamis and Tel Abbyad. Our specialised units have removed a
quarter of that number and there are still hundreds of landmines in nearby
villages and farms, since we lack sufficient means to remove more. We have
repeatedly called upon the international community and institutions to help us
remove those landmines to enable civilians to return to their villages safely.
Burkan
Al Furat (Euphrates Volcano), which is a joint operations room consisting of
the YPG and factions of the Free Syrian Army and other allied local forces,
with the help of the international coalition forces' air support between
February 2015 and July 2015, were able to liberate more than 1500 villages
between Tel Hamis (east) and Sarrin (west) from the terrors of IS. People in
those villages and the villages of 'Arab settlement' live in their houses
peacefully. Under IS, villagers were either deported, used as human shields or
killed. By the same token, village houses were looted, demolished, filled with
oil tanks and burned to create smokescreens to mislead the coalition forces'
jets and our fighters, before retreating from an area in which they were
dispelled, leaving behind complete destruction. Unfortunately, the report
accuses our units and holds them responsible for the destruction that has taken
place in Tel Hamis and Tel Abbyad. The authors of the Amnesty report were
unable to see the entire picture and were driven by reports written by
individuals, such as Anwar Al Kataf who has been accused of displacement and murdering
innocent civilians and also membership of IS. Those individuals, and the
organisations behind them, including the Syrian Coalition, are hostile to the
YPG and the Self- Administration in Rojava.
After
liberating and area from IS, the YPG takes control and attempts to secure the
immediate needs of locals including medial aid as soon as possible even before
the arrival of international humanitarian organisations. It is important to
note that the increase in the number of fighters of Arabic and other ethnic
background, totalling a quarter of YPG fighters, challenges the argument
presented in the report about "forced displacement" of certain ethnic
groups. The authors of the Amnesty report interviewed and listened to the
testimonies of people who fled their villages with IS as they were members of
the terrorist organisation and have blood of the Syrian people on their hands
and are responsible for the atrocities committed. Certainly, their views and
testimonies would be biased and impartial, which in turn makes the credibility
of the Amnesty report questionable.
Since
the start of the civil war in Syria, areas that have been liberated from
terrorism by the YPG and its affiliates, are regarded the most secure and
stable across the country. We emphasise that the reality is painful, especially
during the ongoing war, in which Syria has become an arena for a proxy war with
each group serving the agendas of different regional powers. In these
circumstances, maintaining stability and security and protecting civilians are
extremely difficult and require a lot of effort and support. Despite the fact
that in the areas under the Self-Administration and controlled by the YPG
capabilities and resources are limited and scarce, we have managed to minimise
the amount of destruction and losses compared to other parts of the country.
This has been achieved thanks to the huge sacrifices our men and women fighters
have made to protect civilians.
Conclusion
Amnesty
International is a global civil organisation that has shed light on many human
rights issues around the world. It also has a leading role in disclosing facts
and human rights abuses globally. Unfortunately, however, the authors of the
Amnesty report have failed to convey the reality to the general public.
Instead, they have chosen certain terminologies and a title that does not
reflect the actual content of the report, which leads us to question the
credibility of the report and the veracity of the evidence presented.
We
assure the public that an organisation similar to the YPG and its affiliates,
whose members firmly believe in ethnic and religious diversity and fight
against global terrorism to achieve peace and security, would never tolerate or
condone violations or abuses might be carried out by its fighters regardless of
their position or rank. We also emphasise the openness of the YPG's units in
dealing with local and international humanitarian and human rights
organisations and NGOs, including Amnesty International, which we ask to review
its report and show the reality in service of its principles.
The
General Command of the People's Protection Units (YPG)
Friday
16th October 2015
Comments
The credibility of AI is zero
I remember when AI was still a respected organization, even if clear bourgeois slant. But that was in the 20th century. Nowadays they are just another HRW which follows clear political directives from the powers that be in NATO. For example Arnaldo Otegi and other Basque political leaders are in prison for "crimes" of opinion and for facilitating the disarmament of a local guerrilla, this is also the case of many other less well known Basque prisoners, however AI has not bothered acknowledging them as prisoners of conscience, no matter that they clearly are.
So I'm indeed disappointed but not really surprised when AI does the dirty of job of NATO.
The credibility of AI is zero
Yes! I fully agree with your comment. Another example of their bias is the post-war situation in Kosovo. How many people have died or been injured between 1999 and now in demonstrations against a blatantly corrupted government? Hundreds. How many people have been prosecuted? 0. What does Amnesty International have to say about the whole situation? "We are cooperating with Kosovo's institutions and the solution is in sight and will be implemented by Kosovo's own jurisdictions." meanwhile being utterly ignorant against the fact that Kosovo's legal system is one big mess. Despicable, if not worse.