Canadian envoy ignores protesting parents on visit to HDP office

Canadian envoy ignores protesting parents on visit to HDP office

Antonia Wynne-Hughes, the second secretary of the Canadian Embassy in Ankara, was criticized for ignoring a group of parents peacefully protesting

US confirms PKK/YPG withdrawal from Turkish op area
Tohti wins EU's Sakharov Prize for defending Uighurs
Number of foreign visitors to Turkey surges 14.5%25 year-on-year

Antonia Wynne-Hughes, the second secretary of the Canadian Embassy in Ankara, was criticized for ignoring a group of parents peacefully protesting against the PKK terror group during a visit to the pro-PKK Peoples’ Democratic Party’s (HDP) Diyarbakır headquarters.

Wynne-Hughes made a one-hour-long visit to the HDP provincial headquarters, outside of which families have been demanding the terrorist PKK return their abducted children for 53 consecutive days.

After the visit, Wynne-Hughes quickly got in an armored car and drove away without even glancing at the protesting parents.

The weekslong demonstration began with a lone protest was by mother Hacire Akar. Akar demanded the return of her 21-year-old son, Mehmet Akar, who had been missing for three days after he was abducted by the PKK terrorist group. Following her sit-in, and with the help of security forces in Diyarbakır, Akar was finally reunited with her son.

Similar events have taken place since the PKK started its more than 30-year terror campaign against Turkey, responsible for the deaths of some 40,000 people, including women, children and infants.

The HDP, long facing public reaction and judicial probes over its ties to the PKK, is under pressure due to this growing civilian protest movement launched by mothers and local families.

The HDP has many times drawn fire for transferring taxpayer money and funds to the PKK, a globally recognized terrorist group. HDP mayors and local officials have been found to misuse funds in support of the PKK terrorist group and provide jobs to PKK sympathizers.