Afrinpoost
DUBAI (Reuters) – Five people were wounded on Tuesday when an explosive device exploded in the former Kurdish autonomous region of Afrin, media loyal to the Turkish occupation and the Muslim Brotherhood said.
The local sources had told “Afrinpost” that the bombing Tuesday, caused material damage in buildings and shops, amid the deployment of militia elements “military police” and the closure of the main roads leading to the scene of the incident.
Islamic militias affiliated with the Turkish occupation and the Muslim Brotherhood have long tried to accuse Kurdish fighters of carrying out terrorist bombings among themselves as they compete for what they see as the spoils of their invasion of Afrin under the banner of the Turkish occupier.
Since the occupation of Afrin, the Islamic militias under the supervision of the Turkish occupation has divided the villages and areas of Afrin into sectors, where a certain militia stationed in each sector, and monopolize itself to seize the property of displaced Kurds and steal their property and seize their homes.
However, the fact that these militias disagree on their stolen, powerful and barricade quotas often leads them to carry out bombings against their rivals and attribute them to ISIS or Kurdish forces, which is repeated in other areas occupied by the militants from Jarablus to Azaz.
A local source had previously told Afrinpost that the Afrinis must stand firmly and cautiously with the threats that threaten them, and not to disregard preventive methods that might avoid them being trapped by what the militants are planning to keep the region in a state of security chaos. They justify kidnapping and extortion for the indigenous Kurds.
The source said that “the steadfast Kurds in Afrin, especially the city center to avoid walking in the main streets, and the use of secondary streets instead of when traveling on foot, in order to avoid the deliberate bombings by Islamic militias.”
The source also called on people to “buy their items at once once a week, to avoid unnecessary movement during the other weekdays.”