The Permanent People's Tribunal on Rojava issued its preliminary statement before the verdict and said that "the Turkish state is committing war crimes and crimes against humanity".
The statement reads as follows:
"This is the preliminary statement of the panel of judges of the Permanent Peoples' Tribunal, 54th session, sitting in Brussels on 5 and 6 February 2025 to decide on the responsibility of senior Turkish officials for alleged crimes of aggression, war crimes, crimes against humanity in Rojava, north-east Syria, from 2018 to date. The Tribunal has been held at the request of nine organisations (see annexe for list). The defendants were notified but failed to respond or appear.
First of all, we wish to pay tribute to the courage of the people of Rojava, and to express our gratitude particularly to those who have shared their experiences with us. We thank the team of prosecutors, witnesses and participating organisations for the diligence and commitment with which they have assembled and presented an extraordinary wealth of evidence for this Tribunal.
1. Testimony
The testimony we have heard paints a consistent, compelling picture of widespread, pervasive and systematic punishment of a people. Their crimes? Being Kurdish, and creating a society built on principles of equality, justice and solidarity. The aim of the punishment is the eradication of the Kurdish identity, presence and culture.
The people of Afrin were forced from their homes when the city was occupied by Turkey in 2018. The Kurdish population went from over 90% to 25%, as their homes were seized and offered to Sunni Arabs and Turkmen (often themselves IDPs, displaced after Syrian government offensives). Properties were systematically looted, storefronts and street signs replaced with Turkish names, the currency and postage became Turkish, Turkish replaced Kurdish as a language of instruction. Land and property were seized, factories dismantled, the olive industry confiscated and olives repackaged and sold as Turkish. We heard that many displaced from Afrin suffered multiple displacements: to Al-Shahba, overcrowded tented camps with no access to healthcare or basic necessities, and escalating violence; to Al Tabqa, travelling through conflict zones, after another wave of military operations. We heard that around 120,000 people were forced out-40% children, another 40% woman, and many of the others elderly vulnerable people. The current total of displaced was put at 300,000.
Some went to Tel Rifaat, where in December 2019 they were subjected to shelling in a wholly civilian area, where children were playing in an alley near a school. Of the 10 people killed by the two shells fired by Turkish artillery, 8 were children, as were 9 of those injured. We heard recorded testimony of a parent of a 5-year-old son who was killed and whose 7-year-old was wounded. This was one of many such indiscriminate attacks on civilians in the aftermath of the occupation of Afrin.
We heard of many arrests, summary killings of political activists and emergency responders; disappearances; of how people could tell the time by the screams and cries of those tortured, which began at 9am and went on until 5pm. A survivor sald 'my memory of detention is pain that I shall feel for the rest of my life. We were told of abductions, the sexual assaults and rapes of women and girls, the secret prisons converted from schools and agricultural buildings and train stations, and theinability of survivors to speak out for fear of detention and torture, the lack of effective remedies in the militia-controlled courts.
We heard evidence of bombardments of other villages of NES in October 2019, leading to forced displacements of nearly 140,000 more people, and saw evidence -photographic, medical and a lab analysis - of the use of white phosphorus, whose use against civilians is prohibited, and the same pattern of occupation, violence, human rights abuses, land and property seizures and resettlement by other groups, to prevent the return of those forced out. Some areas have seen more than 27 attacks by the Turkish army or its proxies - not military areas, farmers' fields, villages. The multiple displacements have scattered families, with some family members dead, some whose fate is unknown.
We heard how vital civilian infrastructure has been destroyed, to make life impossible. We saw photographic evidence of repeated bombing of gas and electricity plants and oil installations, meaning no fuel for warmth and cooking but also no water, as the largest water plant couldn't operate, leaving a million people -in villages, in refugee camps, in informal settlements, as well as hospitals and agriculture without clean running water, leading to dysentery and cholera. The nature of the bombing made it clear it was deliberate, not accidental. We heard about attacks on medical facilities treating tens of thousands of patients in Kobani and Qamlişo, which again through their targeting and repetition are clearly deliberate; and about attacks on the environment, through illegal logging of forest areas, sometimes for illegal settlements.
The attacks on women - the 'political femicide' of women challenging patriarchy and working for gender equality, the brutal rapes of Kurdish women by Turkish intelligence in the secret prisons, were shown as a direct attack on the Rojavan model, although strongly resisted by the Rojavan women. Finally, we heard evidence of acts of cultural and historical erasure, including the bombardment and desecration of Afrin's archaeological and historical sites, including a 3,000-year-old UNESCO world heritage site now repurposed as a military training ground, the bombing of Shemoka, an experimental intercultural school for displaced children, causing the deaths of a number of students; and the bombing of Simav printing house in Qamişli, in which 7 people were killed. Journalists recording Turkish attacks on civilian infrastructure including hospitals were killed.
2. What the pattern tells us
Turkey's attacks on Syrian territory, without UNSC authorisation, amount to an international crime of aggression. The pattern of attacks, bombings, shellings, drone attacks and atrocities against civilians, the forced displacements and demographic engineering through replacement of populations, the destruction of power and damage to water supplies, environmental damage, the destruction of cultural heritage and educational institutions, the use of rape, torture, secret detention - are all contrary to international law, constitute crimes against humanity and war crimes, and are indicative of genocide. It is not for us, as a Peoples' Tribunal, certainly not at this stage, to adjudicate on legal nuances. We can, however, express our horror and outrage at what we have heard. And we can add that the pattern tends to confirm witnesses' testimony that the aim is to drive out the Kurdish people and culture. The evidence drives us to the conclusion that all the defendants are criminally responsible: President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan; Hulusi Akar, minister of defence from 2018 to 2023; Hakan Fidan, head of Turkish intelligence in the period and now foreign minister; Yaşar Güler, chief of the general staff during the period and now minister of defence; Ümit Dündar, general.
3. Turkey's justification and what Rojava represents
Turkey claims that its operations are 'self-defence' against 'terrorists and their supporters' in Rojava. But the claim is patently unfounded. The Democratic Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria (DAANES), formed in 2014 out of the chaos of the Syrian civil war, is a model of direct democracy, justice, ethnic coexistence, gender equality and peace, founded on principles of pluralism and inclusivity. And it is a model of autonomous self-government, a model the Turkish government is set on destroying. Women working for peace are 'terrorists' deserving summary execution, according to this narrative. While Turkish armed forces carries out many military operations in Syria, the Turkish government also uses proxies -militias that it has funded and provisioned with weapons, and the evidence indicates that these militias are ISIS-aligned groups. Thus, the evidence points, not to the Kurds of Rojava, whose fighters fought ISIS/Daesh, but to the Turkish state and its senior ministers as those directing terror against civilian populations.
4. The current situation in Syria
The focus of the evidence has mainly been on the period 2018, when Afrin was occupied, to late 2024, but recent events have meant the focus has shifted to the present and future, despite Turkey's continuing aggression against Rojava. It is of vital importance to the future of the Kurds that the new Syrian administration engages positively with DAANES, acknowledging it as an autonomous self-governing part of the territory of Syria which does not threaten Syria's territorial integrity, and that it protects and respects Kurdish life, culture and autonomy.
5. The obligations of the international community
The international community is aware of the continuing suffering of the Kurdish people and the crimes of the defendants, but has taken no meaningful action. There is no state recognition of DAANES and no possibility of domestic or international redress. It is vital that the experience of the Kurds of north-east Syria and the crimes against them are properly acknowledged, that DAANES is internationally recognised as an authentically representative and democratic self-governing administration, and that the international community immediately ensures the cessation of the attacks by Turkey, direct and indirect, on the Kurdish people of Rojava, in order to avert a fully-fledged genocide."