PKK continues to forcibly recruit children abducted in Syria, Iraq
Families protesting the PKK terrorist group for abducting children, Diyarbakır, southeastern Turkey, June 13, 2022. (IHA Photo)


In decline after Turkey's successful operations against it, the PKK terrorist group continues to forcibly recruit children it kidnaps in Syria and Iraq.

The terrorist group has sustained heavy blows as public support has been cut off in Iraq, Syria, Iran and Turkey, especially after the Claw operations that Ankara launched in recent years.

Its weakened state is also apparent from its so-called media outlets, which have started making calls for public demonstrations and protests that have fallen on deaf ears.

While supporters of the terrorist group are barred from demonstrating in the northern Iraqi city of Irbil, its protests in the city of Sulaymaniyah have also had few participants.

The PKK is trying to preserve its fledgling power by deceiving and forcibly recruiting children, whose families are now increasingly raising their voices in protest against the terrorists.

A sit-in protest staged by the families of young people abducted or forcibly recruited by the PKK and its Syrian offshoot, the YPG, has now passed its 1,000th day outside the office of the pro-PKK Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP), showing the world how the group abuses children.

The PKK/YPG continues its use of children as fighters despite an agreement with the United Nations to release them.

Mohammed Alo, a Syrian Kurdish activist, told Iraqi journalists that the PKK-affiliated "Revolutionary Youth" group kidnapped a girl named Culya Tarik Dedo in front of a school in the Syrian city of Aleppo.

According to a report from Gulanmedia, an outlet affiliated with the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP), Iranian mother Meryem Hidir said her 13-year-old daughter Esrin Muhammed was kidnapped by the PJAK, the Iranian branch of the PKK, and that her daughter was killed while trying to escape the organization.

In another case, the PKK kidnapped two people in Duhok in July 2019, according to Iraqi media, with their fate still uncertain.

According to a report by the northern Iraqi Rudaw television network on May 21, Meryem Ferid Muhammed was kidnapped by the terrorist group in the town of Ain al-Arab, also known as Kobani, in northern Syria on Oct. 31, 2021. Her father, Ferid Muhammed, requested her rescue on live TV.

Sakir Muhammed Hibo, a 14-year-old boy from the city of Qamishli, and Fehed Abdulrahman, a 15-year-old from the Ain al-Arab's industrial zone, were also reportedly kidnapped by the terrorists. Their families spoke to local media, asking for their children to be rescued.

Iraqi media also reported the abduction of two young brothers in Aleppo, forcing them to join the terrorists.

According to local sources, Ibrahim, just 9 years old, and Muhammed Sevki Yusuf, 10, both born in the nearby town of Afrin, were kidnapped on June 5 by PKK/YPG terrorists in the city center of Aleppo, some 42 kilometers (26 miles) from their hometown.

Anadolu Agency (AA) reported that on June 10, images on social media close to the PKK/YPG showed the terrorist group had recruited 11 more children of Kurdish and Arab origin.

The image shows the children were carrying a poster of Abdullah Öcalan, the jailed ringleader of the PKK, and the terrorist group's so-called banner.

Abdulaziz Temmo, the head of Syria's Independent Kurdish Association, told AA on June 7 that abductions of children under the age of 10 by the PKK/YPG had risen over the last six months.

A written statement on April 1 by the Syrian Network for Human Rights (SNHR) said the PKK/YPG had kidnapped two girls, aged 16 and 17, named Rosil Seyho and Zahide Kocar from Sheikh Maqsood neighborhood in Aleppo.

The statement said the terrorist organization did not allow the children they abducted to see their families, and that the girls were taken northeast from Aleppo to the PKK/YPG terrorist camps in the Manbij district for weapons training.

Furthermore, the PKK/YPG kidnapped four children between the ages of 14 and 16 in the Ain al-Arab area at the end of February, a 14-year-old child in the Tal Rifaat district on March 28, two girls aged 16 and 17 in Aleppo at the end of March, and four children in Aleppo in April, to join its armed forces.

While the PKK in Iraq forcibly recruits Yazidi children it kidnaps in the Sinjar district of Mosul, Iraq, Yazidis have been holding protests for their children's release.

International reports

The U.S. Department of State also mentions the PKK/YPG's forced recruitment of children in the 2020 Human Smuggling Report that it released on June 26, 2020.

A January 2020 report by the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) also said its findings suggest that the PKK/YPG is using children as fighters in Syria.

In July 2019, Virginia Gamba, the U.N. secretary-general's special representative for children and armed conflict, signed an action plan with the YPG to end and prevent the recruitment of minors under 18. However, the terrorist group has continued to violate this plan.

The terrorist organization usually takes young people and children it kidnaps or detains to terror camps for armed training, barring them from communicating with their families.

Images and news about child fighters are also featured in the so-called media outlets of the terrorist organization.

In its more than 40-year terror campaign against Turkey, the PKK, listed as a terrorist organization by Turkey, the United States and the European Union, has been responsible for the deaths of over 40,000 people, including women, children and infants.