Ecumenical Patriarch declares backing for Turkey campaign in Syria

criticisms from neighbouring GreeceThe Orthodox Ecumenical Patriarch's declaration provoked criticisms from neighbouring Greece.  The Orthodox Ecumenical Patriarch has declared his support for Turkey's current anti-Kurdish military campaign in Syria, provoking criticisms from neighbouring Greece.

"Your determined attitude in strictly rejecting any association of terrorism with religion is being reflected on to world opinion," the Istanbul-based Bartholomew I told President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in an open letter. "We pray that you and the Turkish armed forces will achieve success and that Operation Olive Branch will, as its title promises, bring peace to this area." 

The letter, published by Turkey's Hurriyet daily, said the Orthodox Church had not forgotten that hundreds of thousands of people were now displaced because of the Syrian conflict.

Turkey launched a major military operation on 20 January to clear the Kurdish People's Protection Units, or the YPG, from Syria's northern Afrin region, and claimed last weekend to have killed more than 400 Kurdish fighters, whose forces control around a quarter of Syrian territory. Speaking on Sunday, President Erdogan said the campaign could now be extended to other parts of the 500-mile Turkish-Syrian border, to create a 20-mile “security zone”. Meanwhile, Ankara government sources said over 300 people had been arrested in Turkey, most of whose 75 million inhabitants are Sunni Muslims, for spreading "terrorist propaganda" against the military action.

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30.1.2018