MESOP NEWS SALIH MUSLIM (PYD) IN GERMANY – Turkey asks Germany to extradite Syrian Kurdish leader Salih Muslim
WEST KURDISTAN (SYRIA) – 6 März 2018 – ANKARA,— Turkey has asked German authorities to detain and extradite a prominent Syrian Kurdish leader who was briefly arrested in the Czech Republic last month, state media reported on Monday.Salih Muslim, the former co-chair of the Democratic Union Party (PYD), was detained late on February 24 at an upmarket Prague hotel before a court released him last week.
Turkey says the PYD and its Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG) militia are linked to the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) which has been waging an insurgency inside Turkey since 1984.
Turkish officials demanded the temporary arrest and extradition in connection with an attack in 2016, state news agency Anadolu reported.An Ankara court last week issued an arrest warrant for Muslim after 36 people were killed on March 13, 2016, in a suicide car bombing in Ankara claimed by the Kurdistan Freedom Falcons (TAK), seen as a radical PKK offshoot.Muslim has also been indicted in Turkey over a February 2016 bombing in Ankara that killed 29 people, and he faces up to 30 life sentences if convicted.Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said he would discuss the issue during a visit to Berlin on Tuesday where he will meet his German counterpart Sigmar Gabriel.
‘We will not give up’
But Cavusoglu told reporters that Turkey would not “limit its efforts to the Czech Republic or Germany” for Muslim’s extradition. “Let him go wherever, we will follow and not give up,” he said.The Kurdish leader appeared at a demonstration in Berlin on Saturday against Turkey’s offensive launched on January 20, 2018 and dubbed “Olive Branch” in the border Kurdish region of Afrin in Syrian Kurdistan (Rojava) in northern Syria targeting the YPG.
Turkish media published images of the demonstration in the German capital, where there were flags with images of the jailed PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan and the YPG militia’s female branch, the Kurdish Women’s Protection Units (YPJ).