Amnesty International on Tuesday called on Turkey to compensate and allow 24,000 people displaced under a curfew to return to their districts of the Kurdish-majority city of Diyarbakir, Sky New reported Tuesday.
Turkish authorities imposed strict round-the-clock curfews in a number of urban centers in the southeast ravaged by the resumption in July 2015 of violence between the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) and Turkish security forces.
The historic Sur district of Diyarbakir - a UNESCO world heritage site with its ancient fortified walls, historic mosques, churches and synagogues - is one of them.
The curfew began in December 2015 in 11 neighborhoods of Sur, later affecting 15 neighborhoods at its January peak.
The measure is still in place in six neighborhoods as the authorities seek to eradicate any PKK presence.
All of the nearly 24,000 residents of the six neighborhoods of Sur have left their homes, Amnesty said in its report. In total, half a million people have been displaced by fighting across the southeast, it said.
The displaced residents’ right to return to their homes appears to be "in grave danger" due to curfews, damaged infrastructure and demolitions, Amnesty said.
It urged the authorities to "lift the curfew without delay" and take steps to ensure the displaced people’s return to their homes.
Source: MENA
GMT 22:00 2017 Saturday ,11 February
Syria rejects Amnesty’s report of mass hangings as ‘untrue’GMT 16:31 2017 Wednesday ,08 February
Amnesty: Thousands Executed at Syrian PrisonGMT 21:46 2016 Tuesday ,04 October
AI: 10 countries host half world's refugeesGMT 18:56 2016 Thursday ,18 August
Harrowing Accounts Of Torture, Inhuman Conditions And Mass Deaths In Syria’s PrisonsGMT 17:19 2016 Thursday ,18 August
Amnesty: Nearly 18,000 Died in Syrian Jails in 2011-2015Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2023 ©
Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2023 ©