A large POW exchange happened today. 144 Ukrainian soldiers (notably, 44 are from the Azov regiment) for 144 Russian. Many of those are seriously wounded and war is over for them.
Has there yet been any news on how they've been treated while being captive? Haven't been following news so much today.
If we're only talking about 12 people, I would think they could "mysteriously relocate" prior to the agreement beginning.
But it sucks those people have to move.
I'm quite sure that at least most of these extradition requests will be refused, but who knows how things'll play out in the future. The trilateral memorandum was so vague that it could mean that nothing will change or that Turkey will interpret it the way they want.
This part particularly raised questions:
Finland and Sweden confirm that the PKK is a proscribed terrorist organisation. Finland and Sweden commit to prevent activities of the PKK and all other terrorist organisations and their extensions, as well as activities by individuals in affiliated and inspired groups or networks linked to these terrorist organisations. Türkiye, Finland and Sweden have agreed to step up cooperation to prevent the activities of these terrorist groups. Finland and Sweden reject the goals of these terrorist organisations.
So,
YPG apparently is considered an "extension of PKK", which could mean then that people who have volunteered to fight among their ranks against ISIS could be counted as terrorists. Same could be applied to political groups who organize solidarity events or what-ever for Syrian Kurds. Would this mean that if (or rather, when) Turkey bombs Kurds the next time and people mobilize to protest against it, they too will be labeled as "individuals linked to terrorist organisations"?
(Though, I think the biggest concession made was that Turkey was written as Türkiye, not Turkey, in the memorandum.)