Oman Daily Observer

In Syria, a bus ride shows shifting map of conflict

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QAMISHLI: A new bus service linking Syria’s Kurdish-controlled northeast with the government-held west, unthinkabl­e before IS was driven from the area, is raising hopes of renewed commerce between two long-estranged parts of a fractured country.

Kurdish-led authoritie­s hope the new corridor will end the economic isolation of their region, bordered as it is by hostile parties. For Damascus, the corridor holds out the prospect of sourcing fuel and food from the resource-rich northeast.

The service from Kurdish-controlled Qamishli to Aleppo city goes through territory captured from IS by Russianbac­ked Syrian government forces in February. Until then, only an intrepid few would make a journey that entailed crossing through areas held by IS and competing rebel groups.

“Before, there were no passengers, very, very few, because of the security conditions,” said Ahmad Abou Abboud, the head of Qamishli office of the bus company that started the service in late April. Demand has risen steadily since the first busses — sleek, white, air-conditione­d coaches with purple curtains — went into operation.

Weekly trips have increased from two to three, Abboud said in Qamishli.

A Kurdish official said so far the road was being used only for travel, not trade.

The new bus service is the result of one of the most important shifts in the map of the Syrian conflict in recent times, with the areas controlled by government forces and Kurdish-allied militias being linked up near the city of Manbij.

It points to the highly nuanced state of relations between the Damascus government of President Bashar al Assad and the Kurdish authoritie­s that have establishe­d control over wide areas of the north since war began in 2011.

Despite historic enmity, Syria’s Kurds and government have seldom clashed.

They have also found themselves fighting the same adversarie­s in the civil war in areas where their military interests have converged.

Its critics say the main Kurdish militia, the YPG, has cooperated with government forces. The YPG denies this.

The newly opened route passes west from Qamishli through a swathe of territory held by the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), an alliance of militias dominated by the Kurdish YPG.

Much of the SDF-held territory was captured from IS with support from the US-led coalition.

The SDF-held region meets areas held by the Syrian government and its allies to the south of Manbij.

“We heard about this route in the media, after that we knew it was opened,” Abou Abboud said. “We were in contact with the relevant parties, and we have contacts with all parties — the regime and the autonomous administra­tion. “The two sides facilitate­d it.” Abdul Karim Saroukhan, head of the Kurdish-led administra­tion in northeaste­rn Syria, said the bus route was a private initiative, and not sponsored by the government he runs from the city of Amuda 30 km from Qamishli.

He said the route had yet to be used for commerce.

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