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Kurds in Syrian Kurdistan demand more
rights
5.9.2012
Deutsche Welle |
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September 5, 2012
Syrian Kurds are becoming
more vociferous in their demands for more rights as
the conflict in Syria drags on. Many say their time
has come now that the Assad regime is severely
weakened.
Walking along a busy street, Kurdish refugees
explain that they flee here to Turkey to escape the
fighting in Syria. Some return to their homeland as
guerrilla fighters, medics or demonstration
organizers. Bassam Al Ahmed, is an activist who just
arrived from the mostly Kurdish city of Qamishli in
northern Syria.
Al Ahmed says the Syrian government still controls
the big Kurdish towns. Nevertheless, "thousands of
people still demonstrate in the cities," he says. In
July, for the first time, armed Kurds took control
of four towns. He says he believes the tide is
turning against President Bashar Assad.
But Kurdish participation in the uprising is
anything but simple. Kurds make up an estimated
10-15 percent of Syria's population of 22 million.
Kurds face discrimination and repression under Assad.
But when they took up arms against the Syrian
regime, both Turkey and the US became wary.
The Turks argue that an extremist faction of Kurds,
the Kurdish Democratic Union Party, (PYD), seized
the Syrian towns with the intention of launching
cross-border attacks on Turkey. The PYD is
affiliated with the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK),
which Turkey and the US consider a terrorist group.
Referring to the towns under Kurdish control,
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan told a
press conference, "We will not let the terrorist
group set up camps and pose a threat to us. No one
should attempt to provoke us."
Artificial threat?
Every Kurd interviewed for this article, including
strong opponents of the PYD, said Erdogan is
manufacturing a threat to intimidate the Kurdish
movement. Activist Al Ahmed notes that the towns are
controlled jointly by the PYD and the umbrella
group, the Kurdish National Council (KNC). He asks
why Kurds would attack Turkey when many are coming
here as refugees.
Kurdish activists say the real issue is who controls
the opposition movement in the Kurdish region. Kurds
won't allow the Turkish-backed Free Syrian Army into
their areas. Kurds are divided into many political
groups, but they are united in demanding that a
post-Assad government respect Kurdish rights.

Turkey is concerned about a growing Kurdish threat.
When I interviewed President Bashar al-Assad at the
presidential palace in 2006, I asked why Kurds
shouldn't be educated in their own language. Why not
grant Syrian citizenship to some 250,000 Kurds who
were stateless as a result of a 1962 Syrian
government decision?
He promised to resolve those issues, and then
proceeded to do nothing for six years. When the
uprising began in March 2011, Assad finally granted
the Kurds citizenship, but ignored other demands.
Waiting for their chance
In the early months of the uprising, the vast
majority of Kurdish political parties declined to
join the opposition led by Syrian Arabs. Many Kurds
feared that conditions would be worse if
conservative Islamists came to dominate a new Syria.
But in recent months, Kurds have seen the Assad
regime severely weakened.
Miral Biroredda, a Kurdish activist and leader of
a Local Coordinating Committee in central Syria,
says, "Kurds are now engaged in armed struggle. If
Assad falls, Kurds can assert their own rights."
Almost all the Syrian Kurdish parties have joined
the KNC. That coalition has close ties to Massoud
Barzani, the powerful leader of Iraqi Kurdistan.
Barzani acknowledges that KNC guerrillas are
receiving military training in Iraqi Kurdistan, but
claims they are not yet fighting in Syria.
While the KNC has international backing, the
militant PYD has iron discipline and ideologically
committed cadres. The PYD, and its parent group the
PKK lack majority support, but not for the reasons
usually proffered by the US and Turkey.
The PKK has waged a 28-year armed campaign against
Turkey. It targets the Turkish military, but has
killed many civilians in the process. The PKK
rejects the "terrorist" label and calls itself a
national liberation group. Politically, it has been
all over the map. In the 1980s, it called for an
independent,www.ekurd.net
socialist Kurdistan. By the 1990s, it
renounced socialism and separatism. It now demands
local autonomy in the Kurdish region, although
details remain vague. The PYD makes similar demands
in Syria.
The PKK and PYD have angered many Kurds for creating
a cult around their imprisoned leader Abdullah
Ocalan. The PYD engages in extreme sectarianism,
activists say, including attacks on other opposition
militants.
When Syrian troops withdrew from the four Kurdish
towns, for example, the KNC and PYD jointly took
charge. "The PYD took down the Kurdish flag and
hoisted their own," says one disgusted Kurd.
Common demands
Despite these differences, Syrian Kurds have some
common demands. The country should no longer be
called the Syrian Arab Republic, for instance, but
return to the name Syrian Republic. (Kurds don't
consider themselves Arab.) They uniformly reject
separatism, but demand a degree of local control in
areas of Kurdish concentration.
But even such relatively simple demands run into
roadblocks. Syria's Muslim Brotherhood, one of the
major opposition groups, worries that the Kurds
really want a separate state.
"Many of the Kurdish leadership don't express their
desire to separate from Syria," Omar Mushaweh, a top
Muslim Brotherhood spokesman told DW. "But they
sometimes list demands that would lead eventually to
separation."
As an example, he cited the demand for a Kurdish
parliament. "We're willing to accept some kind of
local control in Kurdish regions, but not a
parliament," he says.
Mushaweh strongly criticized "extreme Kurdish
nationalists." He interprets the PYD raising its own
flag, for example, as "creating instability and
fights with Turkey."
The Muslim Brotherhood is now holding talks with KNC
leaders to resolve the sharp differences between
Kurdish and other opposition groups.
Meanwhile Syrian Kurdish refugees continue to flood
into Turkey and nearby countries. Some stay in
Turkey to organize; others go back to fight. Events
are moving rapidly. Activists say that Kurds are
determined to chart their own future in a post-Assad
government.
Copyright ©, respective
author or news agency,
Deutsche Welle |
dw.de
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