human rights watch

lördag 24 juni 2023

Turkey demands more deportations from Sweden especially deportation against the Kurdish people in Sweden .

 


Turkey demands more deportations from Sweden

especially deportation against the Kurdish people in Sweden .


Western countries always accept refugees and in some places they do business with refugees. Currently, the Swedish government is negotiating with the Turkish government about the Kurds


Turkey is demanding that Sweden expel suspected Kurdish separatists ahead of the Vilnius summit in order to gain Turkey's support for NATO membership, sources told Bloomberg.


Sources: Turkey demands more deportations from Sweden.Sweden Sweden demanded Sweden to expel all Kurds from Sweden, also Turkey demanded Sweden to imprison and expel all Kurds from Sweden


Erdogan may have said We should stop all Kurds and force them to keep quiet anyone who talks about kurdistan in Turkish eyes they are terrorists does not matter who they are and from which country they have come


Turkey demands more deportations, according to sources.


Turkey is demanding that Sweden expel suspected Kurdish separatists ahead of the Vilnius summit in order to gain Turkey's support for NATO membership, sources told Bloomberg.


Since the beginning of the NATO process, the country has demanded that Sweden expel a number of people who are accused of having links to the PKK. Despite the entry into force of a new law, which criminalizes participation in terrorist organizations, Turkey maintains its demands for deportations, according to the sources.


Sources with insight into the process tell the newspaper that Turkey wants to see more deportations from Sweden. This is to show that Sweden is taking the new terror law seriously, according to the sources.


The law came into force on June 1 and prohibits participation in a terrorist organization. Turkey wants to have people they see as Kurdish terrorists extradited to the country.


"The PKK is a terrorist organization and it is clear that activities that it carries out on Swedish soil or that are intended to promote or support it – we now have more effective tools to access that," said Minister of justice Gunnar Strömmer (M).


Already at the beginning of the NATO process, demands from Turkey for extraditions from Sweden came with a whole list of specific names. In connection with that, then prime minister Magdalena Andersson (S) said that Swedish law applies – and that Swedish citizens cannot be deported.


Despite several measures from Sweden, there have continued to be demands from Turkey. Last week (https://www.expressen.se/nyheter/erdogan-forvanta-er-inte-ett-ja/) President Erdogan said that Sweden cannot expect any change in the Turkish attitude towards NATO membership.


"Sweden is in Turkey's interest in joining the defence alliance, but it has continued hopes for Sweden," said Alper Coskun of the Carnegie Endowment for international Peace.


On 11-12 July, Nato will hold a summit in Vilnius and Sweden's goal has been to join the defence alliance by then.

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