Activists: Turkish intelligence transferred 2.5 thousand Tunisian “jihadists” from Syria to Libya

Syrian activists confirmed that the Turkish intelligence services had transferred “jihadist” groups and elements of “ISIS” from foreign nationalities, from the Syrian territories to Libya over the past few months.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said today, Saturday, that Turkish intelligence transferred more than 2,500 members of the “ISIS” organization of Tunisian nationality to Libya, among the thousands of people who come from Tunisia and who are with the organization inside the Syrian territories.read more Activists: Turkey has transferred more than 10,000 mercenaries from Syria to Libya

And the “Observatory” said a few days ago, that a new batch of “jihadist” fighters had been sent by the Turkish government to Libya to participate in military operations alongside the “government of reconciliation” against the “national army” led by Field Marshal Khalifa Hifter.

According to the statistics of the “Observatory”, the number of conscripts who have gone to Libyan territory so far, rises to about 16,100 mercenaries of Syrian nationality, including 340 children under the age of 18, and returned from the mercenaries of pro-Turkish factions about 5600 to Syria, after the end of their contracts and taking their financial dues Meanwhile, Turkey continues to bring more elements of “mercenary” factions to its camps and train them.

According to the sources of the “Observatory”, the leaders of the pro-Turkish factions are stealing from the financial dues allocated to the elements, as the leaders of the “Sultan Suleiman Shah” factions known as “Amshahat” pay the sum of 8000 Turkish liras per combatant per month, while the leaders of the “Sistan Murad” faction Paying an amount of 11,000 Turkish Liras per item, knowing that the monthly allocations for all Syrian mercenaries present on Turkish territory are supposed to exceed the mentioned numbers.

The death toll among the pro-Turkish factions as a result of the military operations in Libya has reached 470 fighters, including 33 children under the age of 18, and among the dead are group leaders within those faction

Source: Agencies