Originally posted by the Voice of America. Voice of America content is produced by the Voice of America, a United States federal government-sponsored entity, and is in the public domain. In Northwest Syria, Turkey Extends Aid, Casts Big Shadow by Reuters AFRIN, SYRIA -- The flags that fly over Afrin are both Syrian opposition and Turkish, but there is little doubt who is in control of this battle-scarred city. Nearly four months after Turkey-backed forces captured the northern Syrian enclave from a Kurdish militia, signs of Turkey's influence are everywhere: from the soft drinks sold in dusty shops to the heavy presence of its security forces on the streets. Turkey's push into northwest Syria opened a new front in the multi-sided civil war and highlighted the ever-greater role of foreign powers in the seven-year-old conflict. It is not clear how long Turkey will continue to hold sway over Afrin, previously a Kurdish-dominated area near its southern border. "When Turkey came to help, we stayed here," said Ahmad Jaad, a 27-year-old history teacher who said he had been living in Afrin for the last four years. An Arab, he said he supported the mainly Arab rebels and said life was better than under the Kurdish militia. He was speaking to a group of foreign reporters visiting Afrin with Turkish officials. 'Olive Branch' Under an operation dubbed "Olive Branch" by Ankara, the military and its Free Syrian Army allies drove YPG Kurdish fighters from Afrin in March. Turkey considers the YPG a terrorist group and an extension of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), which has waged a three-decade insurgency in Turkey's largely Kurdish southeast. President Tayyip Erdogan has threatened to crush what he calls the "terror corridor" of YPG-controlled territory along the southern border with Syria. That has increased tension with the United States, Turkey's NATO ally, which has backed the YPG in the fight against Islamic State. "They opened hospitals. They collected children to go to school," said 31-year-old Muhammed Khaled, a member of the recently elected local council in Afrin, about Turkey's efforts. In April, 20 people were elected to the local council, the mayor, Zuhair Haydar, told reporters through an interpreter. He said members included Kurds, Turkmens and Arabs. Hospitals, schools The Kurdish-led authority that runs parts of northern Syria, and previously Afrin, sees Turkey as an invader. "Afrin is occupied," said Ilham Ahmed, who comes from Afrin and is a senior member of the Kurdish-led political authority, told Reuters in a recent interview. "People uprooted from Afrin are now living in a small area, in camps and destroyed houses." She also accused Turkey of resettling insurgent fighters and their families in Afrin. Turkey has repeatedly denied allegations of human rights violations and dismissed them as terrorist propaganda. Two years ago, Turkey intervened further east in northern Syria, an operation called "Euphrates Shield," to sweep out Islamic State fighters and check the advance of the YPG. It has retained a presence there since and is opening schools and helping to run hospitals. In that region, schoolchildren study Turkish and there are Turkish signposts, Turkey-trained police and a Turkish post office. Damascus has accused Turkey of colonial ambitions, while some Syrian activists decry what they say is "Turkification." 'Similar model' Erdogan has said that Turkey has no wish to occupy areas of Syria and wants the rightful owners of those regions to return. One official said Afrin would likely follow a "similar model" to the areas to the east. Turkish security forces will start a process of withdrawing from Afrin next week, the official said, adding it would be a long-term project, as local police needed to be fully trained before it could be completed. Some 2,000 people are being trained as local police, another official said. "We are scared of the situation, the problem is the youth. There is no security for the young men," said one woman on the street, before slipping away. Looting reports Armed young men -- some looking as young as their late teens -- manned checkpoints, wearing fatigues and sandals. Police vans sported writing in both Turkish and Arabic, and had Turkish flags taped on their windows. The United Nations has said more than 134,000 people remain displaced in dire conditions in a zone around some nearby towns. Some limited returns to Afrin took place in May, it said. A safe place? Rights group Human Rights Watch said last month that Turkey-backed rebels seized, looted and destroyed property belonging to Kurdish civilians in the aftermath of the Afrin offensive. Turkish officials in March said they were looking into allegations of looting and property seizure and that they would ensure Afrin would be a safe place for residents to return to. Turkey says that some 140,000 people have returned to Afrin since the offensive ended, although there is no ethnic breakdown of the returnees. The population is around 300,000 now, according to one of the Turkish officials. While many shops remain closed, with graffiti spray-painted across their shutters, one street teemed with people. At a makeshift market, an elderly man sat among some caged chickens. A dozen plump catfish, one still squirming in the midday heat, were laid out on the floor in front of him. Return of olive oil Turkey aims to get the olive oil industry working, after facilities were damaged in fighting, another official said. The officials met reporters in a secure compound off the main street. The sign on that building read "Republic of Turkey Hatay Governor's Office, Afrin Humanitarian Aid Coordination Center." Above the building flew the Syrian opposition flag and, above that, the Turkish flag. "This is a specific spot under the control of Turkish authorities," said one of the officials about the building.