What is the truth about the kidnapping of the child of the announcer, Ahlam Al-Ajarmeh, from Istanbul to Idlib?
Amman Today
publish date 2022-07-24 21:18:00
Compass – Monitor
After the Jordanian broadcaster, residing in Turkey, Ahlam Al-Ajarmeh, spoke about the nationality of those she described as the kidnappers of her child from Lebanon and Syria, denying that they were Turks.
Al-Ajarmeh said in a post on her Twitter account, yesterday, Saturday: “In response to the confusion that some have raised regarding the identity of the kidnappers, I would like to emphasize that the kidnappers were not Turks, but hold Lebanese and Syrian nationalities. Also, the great efforts made by the Turkish authorities were the main credit for getting my child back from northern Syria without being harmed during his recovery.”
After this tweet, which angered activists from Syria, Saklaki wrote on a video he posted on his Instagram and Tik Tok accounts: “I will stop this farce soon so that I will not allow anyone to sympathize with people’s feelings with a story that exploits Al-Waleed… carrying my name Walid bin Al-Walid.”
He also said in his publications: “When you are in a position and the microscope is for you and the eye is upon you, be careful not to commit humiliation, because the mistake of the one who is a friend is a thousand.
Saklaki promised to publish the full story on the 29th of this month, without providing any further details for now.
Al-Ajarma revealed, on Friday, touching details of what she said was the kidnapping of her son “Al-Waleed” in Turkey for 20 days, and his smuggling to the Syrian city of Idlib, through a human smuggling gang.compassA single tweet by Al-Ajarma during the kidnapping period that I mentioned and was published about a week ago, in which she says, “You do not know, perhaps it is a long and painful test, and after it a great relief from God,” without mentioning or mentioning any talk about her losing her son.
The Syrian journalist, Qutaiba Yassin, denounced Al-Ajarmeh’s accusation of Syrians as gangs of human traffickers, without mentioning her dispute with her Lebanese husband, who tried to take his son from Turkey to Lebanon.
Yassin said in a video he posted on Twitter, “In Idlib, there are thousands of children whose families Bashar al-Assad killed and they became orphans… If there are bad kidnapping gangs in Idlib, why is it better to kidnap them, not to go to distant Istanbul to fetch children?”
Yassin was surprised that the announcer did not announce the kidnapping of her son at the time, and waited 20 days to publish about him, and that her husband, the father of the child, was not mentioned in any of her novels.
Syrian news websites quoted the so-called Public Security Agency of the “Hay’at Tahrir al-Sham” organization as saying, denying the arrival of the anchor’s son, Al-Ajarma, to the city of Idlib in northwest Syria.
The statement, published by the Syrian “Baladi” website, stated that the organization opened an investigation into the matter to show that “the case is shrouded in a lot of ambiguity and fabrication.”
The website stated, “The child was with his father, who holds dual Lebanese and Turkish nationalities, and is separated from his wife, Ahlam Al-Ajarmeh, the mother of the child, including family problems, and he wanted to transfer his child to his mother country (Lebanon).”
The accounts of the father of the child’s son indicate that he hails from the Lebanese city of Tripoli and lives in the Turkish city of Istanbul, and he identified himself in a 2016 publication as the president of the “Association for the Development of Lebanese-Turkish Relations.”
The Lebanese University defined the association as aiming to “strengthen the bonds of love and affection between the Lebanese and Turkish society by establishing the best social and cultural relations. Encouraging tourism between the two countries through mutual visits to learn about archaeological and tourist sites and holding exhibitions between the two countries.
Neither Al-Ajarmeh nor the Turkish authorities mentioned the details of the communication with the kidnappers, their identity, or the mechanism by which the child was transferred from Istanbul, Turkey, to Idlib, Syria, which is separated by an estimated distance of 1,800 km, with administrative borders between the two sides.
#truth #kidnapping #child #announcer #Ahlam #AlAjarmeh #Istanbul #Idlib
Jordan News
Source : اخبار الاردن