Khaleej Times

Kurds in Syria relish autonomy

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beirut — “Adnan Hassan, a Syrian Kurd, finally has hope for himself and his people.

Two years ago, Daesh militants nearly wiped out his hometown, Kobani, along Syria’s border with Turkey and killed 10 members of his family. Now with the militants driven out and going down in defeat, a new university is opening in the town, and Hassan will be its professor for Kurdish language and literature. It is the first university in the self-administer­ed Kurdish areas, and the first in Syria to teach Kurdish.

The future of his people, Syria’s largest ethnic minority long ostracised by the government, could not look better, he said. “We are living a dream and we are waiting for this dream to come true.”

Across the border, Iraq’s Kurds have sparked a major confrontat­ion with their neighbours and Baghdad by holding a referendum for outright independen­ce. Syria’s Kurds, meanwhile, are making major advances toward their own, less ambitious goal: winning recognitio­n for the self-rule they seized during Syria’s war. They say their aspiration­s for a federal system in Syria may now find more internatio­nal and domestic support, and they are positioned as a player Damascus must reckon with in any final resolution of the conflict.

Perhaps more importantl­y, they have land. Backed by the US in the fight against Daesh, Kurdish forces control nearly 25 per cent of Syria. They hold most of the northern border with Turkey and have expanded into non-Kurdish, Arabdomina­ted areas. The Americans have set up bases there to provide battlefiel­d support for the Kurdishled Syrian Democratic Forces, as well as the training and advising of security forces and the new civilian administra­tions in liberated areas.

The Kurds have also maintained close ties with Russia and are confident they can fend off Turkey, which is vehemently opposed to a Kurdish entity on its border

The ruling Kurdish Democratic Union Party, the PYD, heads a de facto self-rule administra­tion in the

In rojava, we have a federal project. In (Iraqi) Kurdistan, it is long awaited state. The two complement one another in realising Kurds’ aspiration for a dignified life.” Adnan Hassan, a Syrian Kurd

This is something negotiable. When we are done with fighting daesh, we can sit with our Kurdish sons and find a formula for the future.” Walid Al Moallem, Syrian minister

Kurds “have become the dark horse that can’t be overlooked. We will be participat­ing practicall­y in political process.” llham Ahmed, a senior Kurdish official

Kurdish-majority region of northern Syria known as Rojava. As part of their efforts to promote a federal system, they elected new local councils late last month. By early 2018, they hope to elect their first regional parliament, representa­tive of Kurds, Arabs, Assyrians and Turkmen.

“In Rojava, we have a federal project. In (Iraqi) Kurdistan, it is the long awaited state. The two complement one another in realising the Kurds’ aspiration for a dignified life,” Hassan said.

It is a remarkable turnaround. Syria’s Kurds were about 10 per cent of the pre-war population of 23 million, but Damascus had long suppressed any expression of their identity in the majority Arab nation.

Jubilant Syrian Kurds celebrated their neighbours’ independen­ce referendum by flying Iraqi Kurdish flags alongside the flags of their own militia from cars honking down the streets late into the night.

But the surge in Kurdish power in both Iraq and Syria doesn’t mean the two sides are about to join: They remain divided by political rivalries. The referendum in Iraq’s Kurdish region sparked furious opposition from Iraq’s government, as well as Iran and Turkey, who fear it will fuel secessioni­st movements among their own Kurdish minorities and dismantle the map of the Fertile Crescent in place since World War I. There was also a backlash from the Arabs. Lebanon’s Hezbollah accused the US, Saudi Arabia and Israel — the only state to support Kurdish independen­ce — of manipulati­ng Kurds to start another war.

Syrian Kurdish leaders say their vision is for a federal system across Syria that would maintain unity while giving considerab­le autonomy to various regions.

They depict their proposal as a way out of the country’s intractabl­e 7-year-old civil war.

In a first, President Bashar Assad’s government said it may be ready to talk to the Kurds.

Syria’s Foreign Minister Walid Al Moallem recently noted Syria’s Kurds want “some form of self-administra­tion” within Syria unlike Iraqi Kurds’ push for independen­ce. “This is something negotiable and can be discussed. When we are done with fighting Daesh, we can sit with our Kurdish sons and find a formula for the future,” he said.

llham Ahmed, a senior Kurdish official in the political wing of the SDF, said the government statement can be a starting point toward negotiatio­ns, underlinin­g that the federal proposal is not for the Kurds alone.

The Kurds “have become the dark horse that can’t be overlooked or excluded like in the past. We will be participat­ing practicall­y in the political process and we will be influentia­l.”

The Syrian government is far from ready to share power, bolstered by battlefiel­d victories and unwavering Russian and Iranian backing. Still its position is not secure, with local cease-fires on various fronts liable to crumble and a growing presence of regional and internatio­nal forces on its territory. The Kurds represent an indisputab­le interlocut­or amid a fragmented opposition, otherwise dominated by Islamists. But Syria’s Kurds could face a looming confrontat­ion with Turkey.

Ankara views the Syrian PYD as an extension of Turkey’s own Kurdish insurgency led by the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, or PKK, and is determined to avert Kurdish power next door. Last year, its troops captured a pocket of territory inside Syria to prevent a contiguous Kurdish hold along the frontier.

Turkish forces, with Syrian allies, have skirmished with Kurdish forces holding the northweste­rn town of Afrin. And Turkey announced Saturday it was launching an operation in the nearby Idlib province, controlled by Al Qaeda-linked fighters, in part to push Kurdish expansion there.

Meanwhile, a race is on between the US and the Kurds on one side and the Syria-Russia-Iran alliance on the other for the oil-rich, eastern province of Deir El Zour. Each side is fighting to take back as much territory as it can from Daesh. That race could determine the borders of a Kurdish-administra­ted area.—

 ?? AP file ?? Syrian Kurds wave Kurdistan flags as they join celebratio­ns after the Iraqi Kurds in Erbil held the independen­ce referendum in Qamishli, north Syria.—
AP file Syrian Kurds wave Kurdistan flags as they join celebratio­ns after the Iraqi Kurds in Erbil held the independen­ce referendum in Qamishli, north Syria.—
 ?? AP file ?? Syrian Kurds wave Kurdish flag during a celebratio­n of Nowruz day in Beirut, Lebanon. —
AP file Syrian Kurds wave Kurdish flag during a celebratio­n of Nowruz day in Beirut, Lebanon. —

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