Türkiye’s MIT eliminates top terrorist of PKK’s ‘women unit’ in Syria
A view of the headquarters of the National Intelligence Organization (MIT), Ankara, Türkiye, Jan. 5, 2020. (AA Photo)


The National Intelligence Organization (MIT) eliminated Syrian national Emine Seyid Ahmed, one of the commanders of YPJ, an all-female wing of the terrorist group PKK, security sources said on Tuesday. Ahmed, also known as Azadi Derik, was eliminated in a "precision operation" in Syria’s Qamishli, a stronghold of the terrorist group’s Syrian wing YPG.

Ahmed was among the masterminds of attacks targeting Turkish security forces, sources said. She was already on a target list of Turkish intelligence services.

Sources said Ahmed was involved in attacks targeting security forces in the Operation Olive Branch area, where the Turkish army launched cross-border operations in 2018. The area covers most of northeastern Syria, immediately across the Turkish-Syrian border. Ahmed’s actions caused the deaths of a large number of soldiers and she was also behind cross-border rocket attacks that targeted Kilis, a southern Turkish province on the border, security sources said.

Ahmed joined the terrorist group in 2011, the year when a civil war broke out in Syria. She was trained in PKK camps in neighboring Iraq. After a brief stay there, she returned to Syria. Ahmed was also among the members of PKK’s so-called "Health Committee" and was a senior figure of the YPJ. She was injured in a shootout with Turkish security forces in the past but escaped.