Turkey has embarked on establishing a new border-crossing with Syria’s occupied Afrin to speed up plundering of farmers’ agricultural products and selling them in Turkish markets, the London-base Syrian Observatory for Human Rights claimed on Tuesday.
SOHR said that the Turkish troops and the so-called Afrin Local Council have cut hundreds of olive trees to set up a border-crossing in a region between Afrin and Turkey’s Lewa Iskenderun in Homam region.
It further said that the border-crossing will be later used for traffic of trucks that will carry olive cargoes and materials from Afrin to Turkey, adding that the new passageway will be a substitute for the two border-crossing of Bab al-Hawa and Atmah.
In the meantime, local sources reported that the Anakar-backed militants gathered the olive products in the village of Tal Hamou in Afrin following their commanders’ order nom de guerre Abu Samih al-Homsi.
The sources went on to say that members of Afrin Local Council have also asked for a 10 percent share of Afrin agricultural products.
The Kurdish-language Hawar news reported on Saturday that governor of Turkey’s Hatay called on Ankara-backed militants in Afrin in Northwestern Aleppo to hand over the entire olive crops to the Turkish province.
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