Kurdish Struggle Blurs Syria’s Battle Lines Kurdish Struggle - TopicsExpress



          

Kurdish Struggle Blurs Syria’s Battle Lines Kurdish Struggle Blurs Syria’s Battle Lines By BEN HUBBARD and an EMPLOYEE of THE NEW YORK TIMES Published: August 1, 2013 BEIRUT, Lebanon — Street names in Syria’s far northeastern corner have been changed from Arabic to Kurdish, schools openly teach the Kurdish language, and the country’s most powerful Kurdish militia flies its flag from checkpoints on main roads. Multimedia Video Feature Watching Syria’s War Ball of Fire Hangs Over an Alawite Neighborhood.Related While Praising Troops, Assad Promises Victory (August 2, 2013) Head of Syrian Opposition Rejects Talks With Assad (August 1, 2013) Connect With Us on Twitter Follow @nytimesworld for international breaking news and headlines. Twitter List: Reporters and Editors . The New York Times Kurdish efforts to push for autonomy have set off clashes. Across northeastern Syria, the Kurds, the country’s largest ethnic minority, have taken advantage of the vacuum left by the civil war to push for the autonomy long denied them by the government of President Bashar al-Assad. Their struggle does not fit neatly into the war between Mr. Assad’s government and the rebels seeking his ouster, and different parts of the scattered Kurdish population have allied at times with forces on either side. The fight for a measure of autonomy by Syria’s Kurds is the newest conflict in a broader struggle in which Kurds, spread across Turkey, Iraq, Syria and Iran and oppressed for decades, are trying to take advantage of the chaos in the Middle East to achieve longstanding ambitions for self-government and democratic rights. Most Kurds say their ultimate aim is an independent state, which was first promised to them, and then denied, by the victors of World War I. That perceived betrayal has sown deep grievances in the collective Kurdish psyche. But for now Kurdish leaders say their goal is more autonomy within existing countries, with Kurdistan in Iraq as a model. Recently, Kurdish assertiveness in Syria has set off rounds of clashes, pitting Kurds against rebel groups that accuse them of collaborating with Mr. Assad, and against fighters linked to Al Qaeda who see Kurdish control as a challenge to their plan to establish an Islamic state. Scores of fighters from both sides have been killed, and new violence is shaking Kurdish areas long considered quiet. This week, a car bomb killed a prominent Kurdish politician, Isa Huso, in Qamishli, and rebel forces took over a Kurdish village in Aleppo Province, detaining about 200 Kurds, activists said. The fighting highlights the further shattering of battle lines in the Syrian civil war as rebel groups focus their efforts on local struggles only loosely connected to their declared goal of toppling Mr. Assad. Kurdish political leaders say they are not seeking an independent Kurdish state in northern Syria, but are only pushing for greater Kurdish rights. They model their struggle in part on the status achieved by Kurds in Iraq, who run a region in the north that is essentially independent from Baghdad, conducting its own foreign policy, controlling its ports of entry and fielding its own armed forces. Although for now that region relies on Iraq’s central government for much of its budget, it has sought deals with Turkey and foreign companies to sell its oil in a bid for economic independence. Meanwhile, Syrian Kurdish militiamen have traveled to Iraqi Kurdistan for training, and the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, or P.K.K., which is negotiating its own peace with Turkey, has provided support to its brethren in Syria. A recent trip by a reporter through the Kurdish area of Syria revealed many steps toward Kurdish autonomy as well as fighters who have taken up arms to obtain it. “The Kurds will take their right to self-determination under any political regime, with President Assad or without him,” said Haval Mahmud, a militiaman with the Democratic Union Party, known by its Kurdish-language abbreviation, P.Y.D., in Qamishli. “We are gaining our rights with our blood, not as a gift from any side.” About 9 percent of Syria’s 22 million people are ethnic Kurds, most of them living in communities scattered near the Turkish border, with greater concentrations to the east, near Iraq. They have long complained of discrimination by the state, which suppressed their language and invested little in their areas despite the region’s richness in oil and agricultural land. While many Kurdish youths joined the anti-Assad uprising that started in 2011, Kurdish political parties mostly charted a neutral path, feeling that neither side had much to offer. But since the uprising became a civil war and the government withdrew from many isolated areas, Kurdish militias have filled the void in their communities. Turkish leaders worry that a strengthened P.Y.D., which is linked to the P.K.K., could embolden its Turkish counterpart or lead to cross-border attacks. 1 2 Next Page » Ben Hubbard reported from Beirut, and an employee of The New York Times from Qamishli, Syria. Tim Arango contributed reporting from Baghdad, and Sebnem Arsu from Istanbul.
Posted on: Sun, 04 Aug 2013 15:58:25 +0000

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