Protesters in Turkey denounce Russia over Idlib assault - It's Over 9000!

Protesters in Turkey denounce Russia over Idlib assault

BALADI NEWS

Hundreds of demonstrators gathered near the Russian consulate in the Turkish city of Istanbul on Saturday to protest the intensifying Russian and Syrian regime attacks on Syria's last rebel-held province of Idlib.

The demonstrators, mostly Syrians living in Turkey, gathered close to the Russian consulate in downtown Istanbul to "show the world that Russia is complicit" in the killing of civilians in Syria's northern Idlib region, according to Mohammed Kreimesh, a protest organiser.

"We wanted to also highlight the regime's brutality against civilians and shed light on the humanitarian situation unfolding in Idlib," Kreimesh told Al Jazeera.

Protesters in Istanbul, including women with their children, held pictures of victims of the attacks, while some brandished a banner that read: "Russia is killing our people and children and the world is not doing anything."

"What does Russia want from us? Kids, wives are dying. People are dying," Syrian demonstrator Ahmed Marwan, 24, told AFP news agency.

"We aren't terrorists, we are humans. We came to this country to live. Leaving your homeland isn't easy but we live in this pain. Enough already."

"We are here to protest this massacre going on in Syria," Turkish protester Gulden Sonmez said.

"Here I also want to make this call to Russia, and especially Bashar al-Assad ... anyone who is responsible for this massacre, all of them have to be judged and pay for these war crimes in the name of humanity," she added.

While Turkish police blocked the group from walking to the consulate, located in the busy Istiklal Street, they allowed a small number of demonstrators to unfurl a banner that read: "More than 30,000 children killed by Russia and Assad regime."

Since mid-December, Syrian regime forces and their Russian allies have heightened bombardment on the southern edge of the final major opposition-held pocket of Syria.

The latest violence has displaced more than 235,000 people, according to the UN, while scores of civilians have been killed despite international calls for a de-escalation.

Source: Aljazeera. 

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