The Turkish government may be seeking to use new university campuses to establish a long-term presence in areas of Syria it has taken control of, a move?that could displace Kurds by bringing an influx of non-Kurdish refugees, according to experts on the region.
That universities can have roles in geopolitical manoeuvres was emphasised when Turkey’s president, Recep Tayyip Erdo?an, approved a plan from Gaziantep University to open?.
Gaziantep, a Turkish public institution located in a border city that has seen a huge influx of Syrian refugees during the civil war, will open an Islamic sciences faculty, an education faculty, and a faculty of economics and administrative sciences in Jarablus, Al-Bab and Afrin respectively, according to a decree signed by Mr Erdo?an this month.
The planned new campuses will be in areas of Syria where Turkey has previously deployed forces against the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG) militia and Islamic State, starting in 2016.
Turkish forces recently moved into a different Kurdish area of Syria, in its north-east, in a bid to drive out the YPG. The AKP government in Ankara regards the group as a terrorist organisation and as an extension of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), which has fought for Kurdish autonomy in Turkey.
Ryan Gingeras, a professor of national security affairs at the Naval Postgraduate School in California and an expert on Turkish history, co-authored a recent?New York Times??that argued that Ankara’s plan to resettle non-Kurdish refugees in the areas of north-eastern Syria currently the focus of military action would “create a living, breathing demographic barrier to Kurdish autonomy” in Syria.
Professor Gingeras told?成人VR视频?that, on the one hand, the Turkish government’s infrastructure efforts in northern Syria could be “interpreted as genuine signs of temporary assistance”.
However, he noted the role that the creation of universities?has played in Northern Cyprus, controlled by Turkey since the invasion of 1974. The number of universities in Northern Cyprus will reach 30 by the end of 2019, deepening Turkey’s presence on the island.
Professor Gingeras said that “if the case of Northern Cyprus serves as any precedent, one may also interpret the establishment of state-run Turkish universities in Syria as a sign that Ankara plans to stay for the long term”.
“As it stands now, the region of Azaz and Jerablus are run as extensions of the neighbouring province of Gaziantep, a fact that points pretty strongly to the possibility that parts of Syria are being incorporated into Turkey in all but name. Plans to resettle the region with millions of refugees now living in Turkey also reinforce this latter conclusion,” he said.
Ali Gur, the Gaziantep rector,??earlier this year that under the plan for new campuses, Syrians who return to Syria for education and stay there will be eligible for scholarships. “Our aim is to send students back there,” he said.
The YPG-affiliated?Hawar News Agency??to have claimed that the plan to establish the campuses “confirms” Ankara is trying to alter the demographic make-up of the region.?
Güne? Murat Tezcür, Jalal Talabani chair of Kurdish political studies at the University of Central Florida, noted that an unaccredited Kurdish university had been established in Afrin in 2015. But this “came to an end with the Turkish incursion in early 2018”, he said.
There were “several similar” Kurdish institutions in north-eastern Syria, Professor Tezcür continued. “[Mr Erdo?an’s] AKP government aims to counter the influence of these institutions.”
Professor Tezcür added that “one interesting aspect is whether these ‘new university branches’ in the occupied areas would offer Kurdish education. I very much doubt it.”?
He suggested that “the strategy entails demographic engineering” through “the relocation of some of the Syrian refugees – mostly Sunni Arab – from Turkey into these territories”, and “the displacement of Kurds” into other areas.
Janroj Yilmaz Keles, senior research fellow in politics at Middlesex University and author of?Media, Diaspora and Conflict Nationalism and Identity amongst Turkish and Kurdish Migrants in Europe, argued that the university campuses would “serve for the Turkish imperial and colonist project and will be used for cultural genocide and linguicide of Kurdish?or other languages in the region”.
Gaziantep University did not respond to requests for comment from?THE. But Professor Gur said earlier in the year of the plan for campuses in Syria: “There was a high demand from local assemblies and provincial leaders. I went [to northern Syria] myself and saw the demand, they really need it.”
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Print headline: Kurds fear displacement by Turkey’s campus plans