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With a dose of caution, Kurds oppose Syrian regime |
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With a dose of caution, Kurds oppose
Syrian regime
6.4.2012
By Kelly Mcevers - NPR |
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Kurds in Syria overwhelmingly oppose the current
Syrian regime but have been hesitant to join in the
fighting. Here, Kurds wave the Kurdistan flag as
they rally against the government in the northern
Kurdish city of Qamishli, Syrian Kurdistan [Western
Kurdistan], on March 21, 2012. Photo: STR/AFP/Getty
Images.
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April 6, 2012
When protesters took to the streets of Syria
last year, one of those who joined in was Abu Azad —
a pseudonym he uses to protect his safety.
A member of the Kurdish ethnic group, Abu Azad
helped organize protests in Kurdish areas, calling
for Syrian President Bashar Assad to step down. But
Abu Azad recently found out he was wanted by Syrian
authorities.
"They were chasing me and they want to kill me," he
says.
Abu Azad and his family, which includes five
children, recently walked out of Syria and ended up
in the Kurdistan region of northern Iraq, where the
Kurds of Iraq govern an autonomous zone that's grown
stronger and more prosperous since the fall of
Saddam Hussein as Iraq's leader in 2003.
The trip took Abu Azad's family an entire night,
crossing streams and climbing mountains. Now they
share a house with dozens of other Syrian Kurdish
refugees. Soon they'll be living in a tent.
"We are against this [Syrian] regime, 100 percent,"
Abu Azad says. "All Kurds are against this regime."
But this is only part of the story for Syria's
Kurds, who make up an estimated 10 to 15 percent of
the country's population and are concentrated in the
northeast.
Most will tell you they're against a regime that has
withheld citizenship for many Kurds,www.ekurd.net
forbidden them to speak or teach in their own
language, and treated them like second-class
citizens. But they're not all willing to fight to
bring down the Assad regime.
A Soldier Defects
A man who goes by the name Abu Shiro says he was a
soldier in the Syrian army for a year until he
escaped to Erbil, the capital of Iraqi Kurdistan.
He says he paid bribes to stay in his barracks,
rather than shoot unarmed protesters or arrest
civilians and hand them to the dreaded security
services.
A growing number of Syrian soldiers have defected
and joined the Free Syrian Army, leading an
insurgency that seeks to topple the Assad regime.
Asked why he hasn't done this, Abu Shiro says, "It's
simple. Because I'm a Kurd."
The Kurds are unsure what sort of status they might
have under a new government, and therefore have been
hesitant to join the fighting against the current
leadership.
It's a position that infuriates many in the Syrian
opposition. If you are against the Assad regime, the
thinking goes, why not stay and fight, or at least
stay and protest?
The reason, says Abdulhakim Bashar, who heads a
Syrian Kurdish political party, is that
predominantly Arab members of the Syrian opposition
have refused to reassure the Kurds that they'll have
it better if the current regime falls.
At Odds With The Syrian
Opposition
At a recent meeting meant to unite the Syrian
opposition, Kurds walked out after opposition
leaders refused to promise the Kurds some special
recognition in the new Syria.
"If this regime falls, and we don't have a clear
program of how we'll get our rights, it could be
worse than the regime itself," Bashar says.
Bashar says U.S. and European diplomats have been
pushing the Kurds to focus on bringing down the
Assad regime first, and worry about the details
later.
But the Kurds don't totally trust the international
community either, says Robert Lowe of the London
School of Economics, who has co-edited a book about
the Kurds of Syria. They believe they were abandoned
when they rose up against the Syrian regime several
years ago.
"Kurds have suffered before. They had their own
uprising in 2004. And they suffered very badly for
this," Lowe says.
Dozens of Kurds were killed, and hundreds more fled
the country.
A Mistrust Of Turkey
What's more, says Lowe, there's the question of
Turkey. Turkey has been very supportive of Syrians
who oppose their regime. But Turkey has for decades
dealt harshly with its own Kurdish minority.
"The Kurds of Syria are very suspicious of Turkey
and are very hostile to Turkish involvement," Lowe
says.
Even if Turkey acts against the Syrian regime by,
say, arming the Syrian opposition, the Kurds will
not trust Turkey's motives or intentions, says Lowe.
So until the Kurds know more about how their friends
and enemies will act, the Kurds of Syria say they
will wait and see.
Copyright 2012 National Public Radio. To see
more, visit http://www.npr.org/.
Copyright ©, respective author or news agency,
npr.org
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