|
Plight of Kurds
in Syria- Sherkoh Abbas -
18.6.2004
Syrian President, Bashar al-Assad has taken
several positions during his career, only to
take them back later. When Assad took power in
the summer of 2000, Kurds hoped that he would be
more modern and liberal than his authoritarian
father. They hoped he would make changes in
Syria's economic and political system and would
recognize the benefit of an autonomous
Kurdistan.
But such hopes have been dashed. The younger
Assad is just as disinterested in helping the
Kurds as his father was. He has made public
promises to return land and citizenship to
Kurds, whom were stripped of their citizenship
and their land taken from them due to the
Arabization laws in Syria. These promises have
yet to come to light. Time and again, he has
manufactured a pretext to stall the
implementation of changes to the Kurdish issues.
He uses excuses that change cannot occur
overnight, but yet changes occurred overnight in
the constitution that aloud him to become
president at such an early age.
Regrettably, Syria is stubbornly pursuing a
military solution against the Kurds and has
intensified repression, encouraged by an
apparent international complacency. This will
further aggravate tension and escalate violence
in the region. A political solution, which
satisfies the legitimate aspirations of the
Kurdish people alone, can bring to an end the
Kurdish conflict. This is the reason why we urge
the United States to pay to Kurds the same
admirable role, which has helped to heal the
pain in Iraq.
Human rights violations still occur on a daily
basis to the Kurdish population. These
violations threaten the very livelihood of the
Kurdish race. The Kurds living in Syria are not
recognized as a minority, some not even as
Syrian citizens. Their cultural and civil rights
are withheld from them. The political parties
and organizations of the Syrian Kurds are
forbidden in Syria. In 1963 the Syrian Baath
Party published a 12-point plan, aimed at wiping
out the cultural identity of the Kurds. The plan
provided for the establishment of the
Arabization Policy that replaced the Kurdish
population with Arabs loyal to and armed by the
regime and forcibly resettled them on Kurdish
land. Since 1967, the campaign of Arabization
has replaced the Kurdish names of cities,
streets, buildings etc… with Arab names, Kurdish
publications are forbidden, Kurdish language
media are not allowed and it banned the teaching
of Kurdish in schools. Since 1992, children have
not been able to be registered with Kurdish
names. Whoever professes himself a Kurd in
Syria, or demands cultural and political rights
for Kurds, is persecuted, imprisoned and
mistreated, some of whom include women and
children who were jailed for speaking their
minds. Today 225,000 Kurds in Syria are
designated as "foreigners" and 25,000 are
categorized as "unregistered."
The terrible situation that the Kurds are in and
the hardships they suffer are not only against
international laws but contrary to the
principles of the Human Rights Declaration.
This initiative is timely and in the interest of
peace in our region. We therefore, ask the US
Congress and Senate to pass a resolution to stop
Syria from implementing the following policies:
- Stop the Arabization policy of Kurdish regions
within Syria.
- Stop mass arrests, torture, and killing of
Kurds within Syria.
- Stop the promoting of hate between Arabs and
Kurds.
- Stop the arrests of political, human rights,
and reform activists in Syria.
- Stop all Human Rights violations against all
minorities.
And to support the implementation of the
following:
- The recognition of Kurdish identity and
culture, specifically education in the Kurdish
language, and human rights.
- To preserve language, education, media, and
culture of the Kurdish people.
- Self-government should be exercised in
accordance with human rights norms.
- The restitution of lands, territories and
sites confiscated, occupied, used or damaged
without the consent of the rightful owners
- Allow the Kurds to establish and maintain the
political, economic, legal, cultural and social
institutions of their own choice.
- Make all Kurds Citizens of Syria and give them
access to national as well as traditional health
services.
- Within their territories, Kurdish peoples
should be entitled to the fullest possible
self-government.
- Positions in the central administration
(particularly army, police, judiciary, and
intelligence services) must be accessible to the
Kurdish people without any discrimination.
Attention should be paid to the recruitment of
Kurdish people into these positions and
eliminating systemic barriers against their
employment.
For the reasons listed above we urge you to do
all that you can to provide urgent aid to the
Syrian Kurds to put a stop to these human rights
violations and to support our efforts of
self-determination. We also urge the US
government to consider implementing an amendment
to the US Congressional punitive Law against
Syria by adding the Kurdish issue. In these
endeavors we look to the support and
understanding of our friends.
Sherkoh Abbas
Kurdish Leadership Console - US Spokesman |