Syrian businessmen said 15 giant plants have been dismantled and brought across the
border to Turkey, in addition to many other smaller factories. Some of these
factories were re-assembled in Turkey and are already operational, while others
were sold as second-hand machinery. Some of the material was even sold as scrap
in Istanbul and other western provinces.
One businessman said, “Factories for olive oil,
yarn, shoes, ... whatever you want. In particular, Jabhat al-Nusra militants are dismantling and selling
them. All the border crossings, except the ports of Tartus and Latakia, are
under the control of Jabhat al-Nusra, the Free Syrian Army and the Kurdish
Popular Protection Units. Truckloads of dismantled machinery easily cross
through the gates controlled by Jabhat al-Nusra.”
Another businessman noted that Aleppo was the
economic center of Syria under Bashar al-Assad, and said, “These factories have
stopped operations because of the war. In Hatay and other Turkish cities you
can find machinery and equipment brought over from the Aleppo region. The
machines are in working order, and they are cheap.” The same businessman said
that Jabhat al-Nusra has been looting Syrian factories, thus contributing to
increasing poverty in the neighboring country.
Ibrahim Bugur, the chairman of the Turkish Federation of Shoe Manufacturers, confirmed the existence of factories brought over from Syria and reassembled in Turkey.
Bugur, who last week made the news when he said Turkish shoe manufacturers were losing business as a result of this illegal Syrian shoemaking, said, “Whatever you want comes over the border. Some of it is production equipment and machinery. A solution must be found to this illegal activity.”
Source: Turkish Taraf News; Translation by Al Monitor
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