Russia has accused Turkey of using three humanitarian organizations to
funnel weapons and supplies to IS and other jihadist groups in Syria.
Moscow also called for Turkey close the porous border to extremists.
Russia's UN Ambassador Vitaly Churkin on Friday sent a letter to the UN
Security Council saying three Turkish humanitarian organizations were
fronts for the country's intelligence service to send weapons and
supplies to extremists in Syria.
"The main supplier of weapons and military equipment to ISIL fighters is
Turkey, which is doing so through non-governmental organizations,"
Churkin said in a letter dated March 18, referring to the self-declared
"Islamic State" (IS) group by another acronym, ISIL.
Churkin accused the Besar Foundation, the Iyilikder Foundation and the
Foundation for Human Rights and Freedoms (IHH) of shipping "various
supplies" on behalf of Turkey's MIT intelligence agency.
Turkey accused of supporting extremists
It is not the first time Russia has accused Turkey of backing extremist
groups in Syria, where Moscow is backing the regime against rebels and
the IS group. Russia and the Syrian government consider all rebels
fighting against the regime to be terrorists.
Turkey, Qatar and Saudi Arabia have been the main backers of rebels,
several of them hard-line Islamist groups, seeking to overthrow Syrian
President Bashar al-Assad.
Turkey denies supplying extremist groups, but has often been accused of
having turned a blind eye, if not actively supporting
fighters crossing the border, as well as providing supplies and weapons to various groups.
Some Turkish-backed groups such as the jihadist Ahrar al-Sham have ties to al-Qaeda's Syrian affiliate, the al-Nusra Front.
As the conflict in Syria has progressed, fighters from some rebels
groups have broken off to join with more radical jihadists, including
al-Nusra and IS. Adding to the complexity, the Syrian Kurds have accused
Turkey of backing extremist groups to thwart their efforts in
self-governance and military advances.
Lavrov and Kerry talk
Separately on Friday, US Secretary of State John Kerry and Russian
Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov spoke on the phone about strengthening a
ceasefire in Syria and expanding humanitarian operations.
The ceasefire, which does not include al-Nusra and IS, has largely held
for several weeks as UN-backed peace negotiations between regime
representatives and the opposition continue in Geneva. But the UN said
this week that humanitarian supplies were only able to reach 30 percent
of those in desperate need.
In the talks, Lavrov called on Turkey to seal the Turkish-Syrian border
which he said was "actively used" to send Islamist fighters to Syria via
Turkey.
Russia and Syria have voiced concerns that the lull in fighting could be
used by rebel backers to bolster various rebel factions with weapons,
supplies and fighters.
Russia's renewed accusations come as
two prominent Turkish journalists are on trial
for treason over a 2015 story they published with pictures of trucks
alleged to have belonged to Turkey's MIT intelligence agency carrying
weapons to Syria.
At the time, in January 2014, the trucks were stopped by gendarmerie.
The government first said the shipments were a national secret, then
said they were carrying food and medicine.
cw/jm (AFP, AP)
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