议员Uca 女士, 告诉Sputnik,在靠近土耳其与叙利亚,伊拉克边境Sirnak 省 Cizre 地区,土耳其士兵将躲在几个建筑内的大约150名库尔德人活活烧死。一些人无头,一些人被完全烧毁。该地区最近几个月一直在反抗安卡拉当局的封锁和宵禁。
暴行发生时间未被指出。
另外,在更接近内地的Diyarbakir地区,数百人在第79个宵禁日,被困地下室中,处境危急。
Turkish forces are accused of letting 150 Kurds in basements burn alive
A Kurdish MP claimed some of the burned bodies were also without heads
Feleknas Uca did not specify when the alleged atrocity in Cizre occurred
Today Turkey increased its bombing of separatists operating in Syria
It has responded with brutal force to a bombing in Ankara on Wednesday
Turkish leaders have blamed Kurdish separatists for the deadly blast
By COREY CHARLTON FOR MAILONLINE
Turkish forces have been accused of letting 150 Kurds trapped in basements burn to death, while the country has responded to this week's deadly bombing in Ankara with increased shelling in Syria.
Kurdish MP Feleknas Uca claimed burned bodies were found also found without heads in the district of Cizre, which has been under Turkish siege for several months.
She did not specify when the alleged atrocities took place, though her comments come as the military responds with brutal force to this week's bombings at the hands of Kurdish separatists.
On Wednesday, a car bomb detonated in the capital of Ankara, causing a blast and inferno that killed 28 people.
This was followed yesterday by a remote controlled explosion in the country's far southeast which struck a military convoy, killing another seven.
The Turkish leadership swiftly condemned the attacks and immediately blamed them on Kurdish separatists operating in Syria, who it says are linked to the outlawed PKK.
Ms Uca, a Kurdish MP in Turkey, told Sputnik: 'In Cizre district of Sirnak, around 150 people have been burned alive in different buildings by Turkish military forces.
'Some corpses were found without heads. Some were burned completely, so that autopsy is not possible.'
The region, located near where the borders of Turkey, Syria and Iraq meet, has been subjected to curfews and blockades for several months as Ankara attempts to stamp out the PKK.
She added that the situation in Diyarbakir, district further inland, was 'terrible', with hundreds trapped in basements during their 79th day of curfews.
Turkey's attacks have also spread further into Syria in recent months as it attempts to weaken Kurdish forces fighting in the neighbouring civil war.
Today it intensified its nearly week-long shelling of positions in Aleppo province, where it has sought to halt the advance of a Kurdish-led alliance against rebel forces.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitor said Ankara's overnight bombardment was the heaviest since it began targeting the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) on Saturday.
Turkey also expanded its fire, the Britain-based monitoring group said, hitting the Kurdish town of Afrin for the first time, where two civilians were killed and 28 wounded.
Ankara has been angered by the SDF's operation in Aleppo province, where it has seized key territory from rebel forces supported by Turkey.