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The ‘gift’ of Tunisia’s delicate date palm drink

By - Aug 14,2019 - Last updated at Aug 14,2019

A customer buys bottles of legmi from a street vendor, a coveted date palm drink, in the south-western Tunisian town of Gabes, on July 18 (AFP photo)

GABES, Tunisia — As soon as the sun is up, people in southern Tunisia rush out to buy a glass or bottle of legmi, a coveted date palm drink that is too delicate to be sold far from the oasis.

At 7:00am, at the busy Ain Slam roundabout in the centre of the coastal city of Gabes, bicycles, cars and military vehicles are clustered around three men seated on plastic chairs.

Next to them are jugs brimming with the precious juice, a testament to the Gabes saying: “Even if the legmi attracts mosquitos, people will stick around.”

Favoured particularly during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan for its high sugar content, this drink, typical of Saharan oases, is primarily consumed from March to October.

Many Tunisians enjoy legmi for breakfast, such as Akram, who has walked to the roundabout for the morning rush.

“We were born with legmi,” he said.

“My grandfather and my father produced it, my one-and-a-half-year-old daughter has already drunk it, and me, I have even written a song about legmi,” said the singer, in his thirties.

Another customer, Haithem, 30, described the drink as “part of our identity”.

“It’s something rare, it’s a gift,” he said. 

A producer must have an expert hand and not be too greedy to draw the sap from the palm without killing it, he said

 

‘Prince’ of palm tree 

 

At the Ain Slam roundabout, a 1.5-litre bottle sells for around 2.5 dinars ($0.87).

One of the producers is Ridha Omrane Moussa, who describes himself as the “prince of the palm tree”.

Now in his sixties, he has harvested the nectar since learning the technique aged 14 from a relative in the Gabes oasis of Nahal. 

“He who doesn’t love the palm tree is not Gabesian. After God, there is the palm tree,” he said.

Perched atop an 8 metre palm, cigarette between his lips, Moussa had just finished his harvest for the day. 

To extract a daily take of 15 litres, he climbs the palms barefoot, using nothing but notches he made in their trunks.

He carefully cuts the bark to cause a reaction from the palm that makes its sap rise. 

But “one must not touch the heart of the palm, otherwise it dies”, Moussa warned.

He has 25 palm trees but harvests from each for just two-and-a-half years before letting them rest for four years, producing around 8,000 litres annually. 

 

‘Young people’s game’ 

 

Other than fresh, or “living” legmi, a fermented, alcoholic version of the drink is produced, called “dead” legmi.

Back at the Gabes roundabout, Haithem described the alcoholic drink as “a young people’s game”.

“They don’t have a lot of money to get drunk, so you pay one dinar and get dead legmi... but it’s not good at all.”

In his youth, Haithem and others fermented living legmi for hours in a hut to produce their own alcohol.

“Everyday we tested it. We added herbs, mint... Until today, we don’t know which one was the best because nobody agreed. Those are good memories.”

Along with the harvesting, storing the drink is complex as it turns rapidly into vinegar.

To keep it fresh, bottles of ice are placed in the can that the sap flows into overnight, then the juice is immediately frozen until it’s poured for sale.

This fragile process limits the consumption of legmi. 

“Even in Sfax, there is none,” Haithem said, of the coastal city to the north. 

“It has stayed organic, without any chemicals or ingredients for preservation, nothing.”

Some residents see its fragility and limited reach as a positive.

Haithem said that some were afraid: “If there is a lot of demand, what’s going to happen? They’re going to cut a lot of palms and risk losing the oases.” 

Moussa, the legmi producer, warned that “chemical pollution from factories is a threat to the oases”.

State-owned Tunisian Chemical Group has been processing phosphate in the area since the 1970s and has been blamed for putting the oases at risk.

But for now, the future of legmi producers is assured.

“I taught my son this work so that this tradition stays in Gabes forever,” Moussa said.

Leave our graffiti on the walls, say Sudan protesters

By - Aug 14,2019 - Last updated at Aug 14,2019

In this file photo taken on April 20, a Sudanese protestor sits on a wall covered in graffitti during a protest outside the army complex in the capital Khartoum (AFP photo)

KHARTOUM —The graffiti that symbolised Sudan’s uprising are being painted over across the capital Khartoum, protest leaders complained on Wednesday, urging the military authorities to stop their whitewashing.

The Alliance for Freedom and Change that led the months-long protest movement that brought down Omar Al Bashir said the “enemies of the revolution” had been systematically erasing murals.

“We see this as an ugly act and a pathetic attempt to suppress the beauty, the letter and the spirit of the revolution,” it said a statement.

In recent days some of the colourful murals and slogans that appeared on the walls of the capital during the early stages of the protest that ousted Bashir were painted over.

Together with music, these murals had become a symbol of the popular nature of an uprising that was led by young activists rather than engineered by political opposition.

Most of the murals and graffiti could be found on walls outside of the army headquarters in Khartoum, where protesters camped out for weeks on end.

“This is an absurd measure and shows the inability of the enemies of the revolution to recognise its roots and its realisation in people’s hearts,” the statement said.

It called on graffiti artists to “continue painting murals and exercise all their freedom of expression rights”.

 

‘No real change’ 

 

Continued mobilisation and a deadly crackdown on a sit-in on June 3 led to a phase of negotiations that yielded a transition agreement to be officially signed on Saturday.

The deal agreed by Sudan’s generals and protest leaders provides for a power-sharing period of 39 months meant to pave the way for elections and civilian rule.

Some members of the protest camp however were displeased with an agreement they fear could allow those forces accused of brutal repression during the uprising to maintain their grip on power.

One graffiti artist contacted by AFP said that the decision to remove murals from Khartoum’s walls was evidence that the military establishment was reverting to its old ways.

“When I saw this I felt very disappointed because when we did these murals we were expressing the feeling that the times were changing,” Lotfy Abdel Fattah said.

“And now the signals we are getting tell us that there is no real change, no real freedom,” he said.

Speaking to AFP at the height of the protests in April, he had predicted that the murals might not all stay forever but he argued now that they should remain as a testament to a pivotal moment in Sudan’s history.

Some of the murals also honour protesters who were killed by security forces.

“I don’t know exactly who is doing this but it’s definitely someone with an agenda against change, because what we did was a beautiful thing,” Abdel Fattah said.

Family spares ex-Tehran mayor facing death over wife’s murder

By - Aug 14,2019 - Last updated at Aug 14,2019

TEHRAN — A former mayor of Tehran sentenced to death over the murder of his wife has been spared by her family in a post shared on Instagram on Wednesday.

Mohammad Ali Najafi, 67, was sentenced to death last month after being convicted of shooting dead his second wife Mitra Ostad at their home in the Iranian capital on May 28.

Ostad’s family had appealed for the Islamic law of retribution to be applied — an “eye for an eye” form of punishment which would have seen the death penalty served.

But her brother Masood Ostad said the family had decided to grant him a reprieve, according to a post on his private Instagram account cited by various media outlets.

State news agency IRNA said a lawyer for the family, Mahmoud Hajiloui, had confirmed the reprieve.

In his Instagram post, the brother cited a verse from the Koran that says: “Allah loves the doers of good”.

“My father, my mother and our Mahyar [his sister’s son] forgive Mr Mohammad Ali Najafi” after mediation that involved others, he wrote.

“We are happy that we made no deal for the blood of that honourable [person],” he added, referring to retribution for his sister’s murder.

“We hope Mr Mohammad Ali Najafi in his remaining years... engages in cleansing himself.”

Najafi remains behind bars after also receiving a two-year jail sentence for illegal possession of a firearm, but it was not immediately known if he still has to serve time for murder.

The former mayor’s trial received detailed coverage in state media where scandals related to politicians rarely appear on television.

A mathematician, professor and veteran politician, Najafi had previously served as President Hassan Rouhani’s economic adviser and education minister.

He was elected Tehran mayor in August 2017, but resigned the following April after facing criticism from conservatives for attending a dance performed by schoolgirls.

Najafi married Ostad without divorcing his first wife, unusual in Iran where polygamy is legal but socially frowned upon.

Some of Iran’s ultra-conservatives said the case showed the “moral bankruptcy” of reformists, while reformists accused the conservative-dominated state television of bias in its coverage and highlighting the case for political ends.

Gazans too poor to afford sheep for eid sacrifice under blockade, Israel cash row

By - Aug 08,2019 - Last updated at Aug 08,2019

Palestinian children look at a car decorated with sheep and cows in celebration of Eid Al Adha in Gaza City on Thursday (AFP photo)

GAZA — Ali usually marks the Muslim holiday of Eid Al Adha with his family in the Gaza Strip by sacrificing a sheep, a customary annual ritual for those who can spare the cost.

But this year the 49-year-old police officer says he cannot afford to buy an animal for the “feast of the sacrifice” holiday, which begins next week, after the Palestinian Authority halved his salary five months ago.

“I have slaughtered a sheep every year ... but this year there is no way I can. I am ashamed,” said the father of five, who declined to give his last name.

Gaza has suffered under years of blockade by Israel and Egypt, which cite security concerns for restrictions the World Bank says have severely damaged its economy. Nearly 80 per cent of the enclave’s 2 million residents rely on some form of aid and over half are unemployed.

Ali said that in March, the PA cut his monthly salary in half, leaving him with of 1,500 shekels ($431). A sheep costs around $500.

The PA, which exercises limited self-rule in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, still has some 25,000 Gazan civil servants on payroll despite a decade-long feud with rival Hamas which has left the Islamist group in control of the coastal territory.

Many PA employees across Gaza and the West Bank had their salaries slashed in March amid a dispute with Israel over payments it makes to the families of Palestinians in Israeli jails.

Israel claims the payments fan Palestinian violence, and in February it removed the portion the PA designates for prisoners’ families from taxes it transfers monthly to the body under interim peace accords.

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas has refused to accept partial transfers, saying the PA is entitled to the entire sum of around 700 million ($197 million) shekels, over half its budget. The mounting fiscal pressures have squeezed the Palestinians’ $13 billion economy.

The cuts have put a particular strain on Gaza, where civil servants had already been hit by earlier salary cuts.

“I used to offer a sacrifice every year but this year there is no money,” said Hassan An-Najjar, an unemployed father of six. He says the cost of a sheep would run out the $500 in welfare he receives quarterly from the PA.

“I am looking for someone who can sell me a sheep and divide the cost into three or four payments,” An-Najjar, 58, said.

The median monthly wage in the Strip is around $330, according to the Palestine Economic Policy Research Institute.

The territory’s livestock breeders and farmers say they are desperate for customers ahead of the Islamic holiday, which commemorates God’s testing of Abraham’s faith by commanding him to sacrifice his son.

“This year I brought only 40 cows and so far I haven’t even sold half of them,” said Gaza farmer Mohammad Al Balawi. He says he normally sells 500 each year to people who may also split the animal’s 9,000 ($2,600) shekel price.

“I have not seen a year as bad as this in my life,” he said.

Lebanon PM says more optimistic after crisis talks

By - Aug 08,2019 - Last updated at Aug 08,2019

BEIRUT — Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Al Hariri indicated that solutions to a political crisis that has paralysed his government were almost within reach, following a meeting on Thursday with President Michel Aoun.

The crisis spiraled out of a deadly June 30 shooting in the Chouf Mountains that pitted groups represented in Hariri’s administration against each other.

His Cabinet has been unable to convene as a result, complicating efforts to enact reforms that are urgently needed to steer the country away from financial crisis.

“The meeting was positive and the solutions are near to fruition,” Hariri said in a televised statement after the meeting with Aoun that local media said top security official Major General Abbas Ibrahim also attended.

“I am more optimistic than before. We must just wait a little and God willing you will hear good news,” he said.

The United States said on Wednesday the case should be handled in a way that achieves justice “without politically motivated inflammation” of tensions.

Two aides of a government minister were killed in the shooting that generated the stand-off pitting Druze leader Walid Jumblatt against Druze and Christian adversaries aligned with the powerful Shiite group Hizbollah.

Hezbollah, which is backed by Iran and deemed a terrorist group by Washington, said it believed the US statement was aimed at “adding more complication to the current crisis” and to deepen divisions in Lebanon, calling it “blatant intervention”.

The minister, Druze politician Saleh Al Gharib, declared the shooting incident an assassination attempt for which his allies held Jumblatt’s party responsible.

Jumblatt’s party says it was an exchange of fire initiated by Gharib’s entourage in which two Jumblatt supporters were also wounded.

The sides have been at odds over which court should deal with the case.

The June 30 incident spiraled out of tension over plans by Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil, a Christian politician and Aoun’s son-in-law and an ally of Gharib, to visit the Chouf area.

Jumblatt’s party on Tuesday held Bassil responsible for the incident, saying he had stirred tensions through references to a historic Christian-Druze conflict in Chouf.

Bassil responded that there was an “aggression” against him.

Without naming its sources, leading Lebanese newspaper An-Nahar said Aoun believed Bassil rather than Gharib had been the target of an ambush that day.

Jumblatt is a fierce critic of Syrian President Bashar Assad and his party views the incident and its repercussions as part of a wider campaign to weaken his influence over Lebanon’s Druze community to the benefit of pro-Damascus parties.

Damascus rejects Turkey-US plan, Kurds give guarded welcome

By - Aug 08,2019 - Last updated at Aug 08,2019

Kurdish security forces stand guard at the site of an explosive-rigged vehicle that detonated in the town of Al Qahtaniyah, in the Hasakeh province, on Wednesday (AFP photo)

DAMASCUS — Damascus said on Thursday it strongly rejects a proposed US-Turkish buffer zone for northern Syria, blaming the "aggressive" project on Syria's Kurds, who gave the proposal a guarded welcome.

Turkish and US officials agreed on Wednesday to establish a joint operations centre to oversee the creation of a safe zone to manage tensions between Ankara and US-backed Kurdish forces in Syria.

No details were provided on the size or nature of the safe zone, but the deal appeared to provide some breathing room after Turkey had threatened an imminent attack on the Kurdish People's Protection Units (YPG), which control a large swathe of northern Syria.

"Syria categorically and clearly rejects the agreement between the American and Turkish occupiers on the establishment of a so-called safe zone" in northern Syria, a foreign ministry source told state news agency SANA.

"Syria's Kurds who have accepted to become a tool in this aggressive US-Turkish project bear a historical responsibility," the source added, urging Kurdish groups to return to the fold. 

Turkey has already carried out two cross-border offensives into Syria in 2016 and 2018, the second of which saw it and allied Syrian rebels overrun the Kurdish enclave of Afrin in the northwest.

The deployment of Turkish troops and their proxies in Afrin has drawn accusations of a Turkish military occupation.

Damascus said the planned buffer zone further east serves "Turkey's expansionist ambitions," accusing both Ankara and Washington of violating its sovereignty.

 

'New approach' 

 

A senior Syrian Kurdish official gave the Turkish-US agreement a guarded welcome.

"This deal may mark the start of a new approach but we still need more details," Aldar Khalil told AFP on Thursday. 

"We will evaluate the agreement based on details and facts, not headlines."

Turkey’s foreign minister on Thursday said the deal was “a very good start”.

But Mevlut Cavusoglu said his country would not allow the agreement to turn into a “delaying manoeuvre”.

“The accord must be implemented,” he said at a press conference in Ankara, without giving a specific timeline.

Wednesday’s deal describes the planned safe zone as a “peace corridor” that can “ensure that our Syrian brothers will be able to return to their country”. 

Turkey has the highest number of Syrian refugees in the world at more than 3.6 million, and has faced increasing pressure domestically to speed up repatriations to peaceful parts of Syria.

While the Kurds have largely stayed out of the conflict between various rebel groups and the Damascus government, they have taken advantage of the war to set up an autonomous region in the northeast.

Across the border, Turkey has eyed this push for increased independence with suspicion, regarding its Kurdish leaders as “terrorists”.

Ankara views the YPG as an offshoot of the Kurdistan Workers Party, which has fought a bloody insurgency inside Turkey for the past 35 years.

 

Turkish troops 

 

But the YPG has been a key US ally in the fight against the Daesh group.

As the fight against Daesh winds down in northeastern Syria, the prospect of a US military withdrawal has stoked Kurdish fears of a long threatened Turkish attack.

To allay these fears, Washington earlier this year proposed setting up a 30-kilometre “safe zone” on the Syrian side of the border.

The Kurds have agreed to a buffer zone, but disagree with the Turks on how wide it should be, or who should control it. 

Earlier this week, Khalil said the Kurds had agreed to a buffer zone around 5 kilometres wide, but Turkey rejected the proposal.

He also said the Kurds had opened channels with the Russia-backed government, but it had not yet “made its true position clear despite the urgency of the situation”.

Wednesday’s deal comes at a delicate moment between Turkey and the US, who have grown increasingly estranged over a number of issues, including American support for the Kurds and Turkey’s decision to buy a Russian S-400 missile defence system.

It is also a tricky moment for Erdogan domestically after his party lost control of Istanbul and Ankara in municipal elections this year, and has seen high-profile defections.

In recent weeks, Turkish media have repeatedly shown images of military convoys heading for the border area, carrying equipment and fighting units.

Iran says US Gulf mission will 'increase insecurity'

By - Aug 08,2019 - Last updated at Aug 08,2019

TEHRAN — Iran's defence minister said Thursday that the formation of a US-led flotilla in the Gulf would "increase insecurity" and any Israeli involvement would have "disastrous consequences" for the region.

Tehran and Washington have been locked in a battle of nerves since US President Donald Trump withdrew from a landmark 2015 nuclear deal with Iran last year and reimposed sanctions.

Tensions have soared in the region, with drones downed and tankers mysteriously attacked in Gulf waters.

Washington and its Gulf allies have accused the Islamic republic of the tanker attacks, which Tehran denies.

In response, the US has been seeking to form a coalition whose mission — dubbed Operation Sentinel — it says is to guarantee freedom of navigation in the Gulf.

Britain, which already has warships on protection duty in the Gulf after a UK-flagged tanker was seized by Iranian Revolutionary Guards, has said it will join the planned operation.

But other European countries have kept out, for fear it might harm European efforts to reach a negotiated settlement with Iran.

"The military coalition that America is seeking to form with the excuse of securing maritime transport will only increase insecurity in the region," Defence Minister Amir Hatami said in a conference call with counterparts from Kuwait, Oman and Qatar.

Reacting to reports of Israeli willingness to join the coalition, he said it would be “highly provocative and can have disastrous consequences for the region”.

There have been reports in the Israeli media of the country’s possible involvement although it was not clear in what capacity.

Iran has seized three tankers in the Gulf since last month, including the British-flagged vessel.

The ship seizures came after British Royal Marines helped to impound a tanker carrying Iranian oil off the British overseas territory of Gibraltar on July 4, alleging it was destined for EU-sanctioned Syria, an accusation Iran denies.

Calling the US the main source of tensions in the region, Hatami called on Gulf countries to enter “constructive talks” to provide maritime security by themselves.

Pompeo talks maritime security, Iran with Saudi crown prince

By - Aug 08,2019 - Last updated at Aug 08,2019

WASHINGTON — US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo discussed maritime security, Iran and Yemen with Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman in a phone call on Wednesday.

“The secretary discussed heightened tensions in the region and the need for stronger maritime security in order to promote freedom of navigation,” State Department spokeswoman Morgan Ortagus said in a statement.

Iran has seized three tanker ships in strategic Gulf waters in less than a month, and the United States has accused it of carrying out multiple attacks on ships in the region.

The US has been struggling to piece together an international coalition to protect cargo ships travelling through the Gulf, with allies concerned about being dragged into conflict with Iran.

Ortagus also said that the top US diplomat and the crown prince “discussed other bilateral and regional developments, including countering the Iranian regime’s destabilising activities”.

Tensions between Washington and Tehran — Saudi Arabia’s arch foe — have soared since US President Donald Trump pulled the United States out of a nuclear deal with Iran last year and imposed punishing sanctions.

Twelve months on from the US withdrawal, Iran responded by suspending some of its commitments under the nuclear deal.

Iran meanwhile shot down an American drone in June, with Trump saying he called off retaliatory air strikes at the last minute, and the United States says it has since downed one and possibly two of Tehran’s unmanned aircraft, which the Islamic republic has denied.

On Yemen, “the secretary and the crown prince reaffirmed their strong support for UN Special Envoy Martin Griffiths’ efforts to advance the peace process”, Ortagus said.

Lebanon newspaper goes black to raise alarm over political crisis

By - Aug 08,2019 - Last updated at Aug 08,2019

 A man checks a copy of the Lebanese local English-language newspaper ‘The Daily Star’ in the capital Beirut on Thursday (AFP photo)

BEIRUT — A prominent Lebanese daily on Thursday appeared on newsstands with a black front page in the second such protest by a local paper in less than a year over the country’s lingering political crisis.

“Lebanon,” read the cover of The Daily Star, the country’s only English-language newspaper. 

On 10 blank pages inside, it listed a string of woes including “government deadlock”, “pollution” “unemployment”, “illegal weapons” and “public debt”.

“Wake up before it’s too late!” it concluded on its back page, with the issue’s single picture of a cedar, the country’s national emblem.

The newspaper’s Lebanon and online editor Joseph Haboush said the move sought to convey alarm to the ruling class.

“We wanted to deliver a warning to the politicians and officials that the situation has reached an alarming level,” he said.

In October last year, the country’s oldest newspaper An-Nahar printed an entirely blank issue to protest a political deadlock over forming a cabinet.

The government was formed in January after an eight-month hiatus, but the Cabinet has now not met for over a month since a shootout killed a minister’s two bodyguards.

In a rare comment, the US embassy on Wednesday warned against any inflammation of tensions over the incident in Qabr Al Shamoun on June 30.

“The US has conveyed in clear terms to Lebanese authorities our expectation that they will handle this matter in a way that achieves justice without politically motivated inflammation of sectarian or communal tensions,” it said.

Growth in Lebanon has plummeted in the wake of endless political deadlocks in recent years, compounded by the 2011 breakout of civil war in neighbouring Syria.

The country hosts 1.5 million Syrians who have fled the conflict, often blamed in Lebanon for putting pressure on an already struggling economy.

Unemployment stands at more than 20 per cent, according to the government.

Lebanon is one of the world’s most indebted countries, with public debt now standing at more than 150 per cent of GDP, according to the finance ministry.

Successive governments have been unable to address a waste management crisis or improve an electricity grid that causes daily power cuts, a phenomenon that has long outlived Lebanon’s 1975-1990 civil war.

The print media has also been facing a crisis, with several publications either closing or disappearing in print.

A source at the Daily Star who asked not to be named said employees had not yet been paid wages for June and July.

The Daily Star is a private newspaper owned by the family of Prime Minister Saad Al Hariri, according to press watchdog Reporters Without Borders.

Since July 30, staff at the Hariri-owned Future TV have gone on strike over unpaid salaries, with only re-runs aired for around a week.

Syria buffer zone, sought by Turkey since start of war

By - Aug 08,2019 - Last updated at Aug 08,2019

 A fighter from the former Al Qaeda Syrian affiliate Hayat Tahrir Al Sham fires an anti-aircraft gun mounted on a pickup truck in Syria’s southern Idlib province on Wednesday (AFP photo)

BEIRUT — Since the start of the Syrian conflict, Turkey has pushed for a buffer zone on their shared border to handle refugees and thwart the emergence of an autonomous Kurdish region.

Turkish and US officials agreed on Wednesday to establish a joint centre to look into establishing such a zone, which they called a “peace corridor”, even though Damascus is strongly opposed. 

Here is an overview of plans for a buffer area, which would be located on the Syrian side of the border.

 

Humanitarian protection 

 

In November 2011, just months into Syria’s devastating conflict, Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu mooted the creation of a border buffer, with international backing, in case of a massive outflow of refugees into Turkey.

The Syrian National Council, the main opposition coalition at the time, had also raised the idea of a no-fly zone or secure area to protect civilians fleeing the regime’s crackdown.

 

Against the Kurds 

 

In July 2012, Turkey was furious when the Syrian army withdrew from parts of the north where Kurdish militants — its foes — were deployed.

Recep Tayyip Erdogan, then prime minister, accused Damascus of having “allotted” these areas to the Kurds, which Turkey fears are seeking autonomy.

It sees Syria’s Kurdish forces as a “terrorist” offshoot of the Kurdistan Worker’s Party which has for decades waged a deadly insurgency in Turkey.

Erdogan said he would consider creating a military buffer zone on the border.

In August 2012, Davutoglu urged the UN Security Council to set up civilian safe-havens inside Syria, saying Ankara was struggling to cope with the thousands of people crossing into Turkey each day.

But UN officials and major powers said such camps would face major diplomatic, legal and military hurdles.

 

Free of ‘terrorism’ 

 

Turkey’s next foreign minister, Mevlut Cavusoglu, said in October 2014 that a buffer was needed to defeat Daesh terrorists as well as for humanitarian reasons. 

The idea met with a guarded international response.

In November 2015, Erdogan again called on world leaders to rally behind “a safe zone cleared of terror”, implying it would be rid of both Daesh and Syrian Kurdish fighters.

In February 2017, he said the aim was to establish an area of at least 4,000 square kilometres “free from terrorism”.

 

US-Turkey agreement 

 

President Donald Trump’s shock December 2018 announcement that the bulk of US troops would be withdrawn from Syria was welcomed by Turkey.

But the two quickly fell into a row over the future of Kurdish forces, a key US ally in the fight against IS.

In January 2019, Trump for the first time suggested a safe zone along the border, Turkey quickly affirming it would be able to handle this alone.

Damascus said it would be an infringement of its sovereignty.

In late July, US and Turkish officials opened negotiations to hammer out details of a safe zone, each side having different ideas.

Considering the US proposals would not keep the Kurdish group far enough away from Turkey’s border, Erdogan on August 6 threatened an operation “very soon” to “eliminate” the US-backed Kurdish People’s Protection Units. 

The following day, both sides announced they had agreed to a “joint operations centre” to work on creating the safe zone. 

They gave no details but described it as a “peace corridor”.

Damascus again voiced its rejection of the proposed zone while Syria’s Kurds gave a guarded welcome.

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