WORLD
2 min read
German police probe violence at YPG terror group rallies
Stuttgart police say they are seeking witnesses as two people were reportedly assaulted and injured in a confrontation with the supporters of the YPG terror group.
German police probe violence at YPG terror group rallies
(FILE) German authorities estimate that YPG terror group and its parent organisation, PKK, have more than 15,000 active followers in the country. / Reuters
2 hours ago

German police have launched an investigation into a violent assault that left two men injured during a pro-YPG terror group demonstration, as similar protests turned violent across the country this week.

A 23-year-old man was stabbed with a sharp object and a 20-year-old was beaten when they got into a confrontation with a larger group of demonstration participants, Stuttgart police said in a statement on Friday.

Emergency services transported the 23-year-old to a hospital, while the attackers fled in an unknown direction. Authorities asked witnesses who saw the incident or the assailants to contact the criminal police.

The assault occurred during a demonstration organised on Wednesday evening by supporters of the YPG terror group that descended into chaos as protesters repeatedly ignited pyrotechnics and attacked passing vehicles and police officers.

The demonstrators were protesting the Syrian government's military operations against the YPG terror group in northeastern Syria.

The operations began after the group failed to comply with a ceasefire agreement that required it to withdraw forces east of the Euphrates River and transfer administrative control of key provinces to Damascus.

RelatedTRT World - Türkiye condemns YPG attack on flag at Syrian border as 'open provocation'

In Munich, the YPG terror group's supporters occupied the Social Democratic Party (SPD) office on Thursday evening, protesting Germany's coalition government for not intervening against Syrian army's operations and continuing support to the Syrian government.

The demonstrators carried banners of the YPG terror group, which is the Syrian branch of the PKK terror organisation. Police removed the activists from the building and launched an investigation into trespassing charges.

Earlier on Thursday in Hamburg, pro-YPG supporters blocked railway tracks at the main train station, disrupting long-distance and regional train services.

During demonstrations in the city centre, tensions frequently arose between protesters and police as demonstrators attempted to display YPG terror group's flags. Police deployed a large contingent and accompanied the demonstration with water cannons and riot control vehicles.

Supporters of the YPG terror group have announced further protests and disruptive actions across the country in the coming days.

German authorities estimate that the YPG terror group and its parent organisation, the PKK, have more than 15,000 active followers in the country and are pursuing extensive propaganda activities among the Kurdish immigrant population.

The PKK is classified as an ethno-nationalist and separatist terrorist organisation by the EU's law enforcement agency, Europol and has been banned in Germany since 1993.

RelatedTRT World - YPG terror group 'only changes its position when it faces force' — Turkish FM Hakan Fidan
SOURCE:AA