More than 21
pro-government militiamen have been killed in two days of battles with
Syrian Kurdish forces in northeast Syria that has widened the Kurds'
control over a city at the border with Turkey, a Syrian Kurdish official
said. Five members of the
Kurdish internal security force, the Asayish, were also killed in the
fighting in Qamishli which the official said was the second most violent
between the government and Kurdish forces since the Syria conflict
began in 2011. A Reuters witness
saw at least 40 members of the pro-government militia surrendering to
the Kurdish forces in the city after a battle for a prison where they
were holed up on Thursday. Heavy gunfire could be heard in the city. "More
than 21 dead from regime forces of Qamishli as a result of clashes and
regime attacks, with five Asayish fighters martyrs," the official wrote
in a message to Reuters. Syrian army officials could not be reached for comment. Qamishli
is mostly controlled by Kurdish security forces that took control as
the crisis spiraled in 2011. Syrian Kurdish groups now control wide
areas of northern Syria where they have set up their own government. The main Kurdish
groups and their allies aim to finalize plans within six months for an
autonomous political federation in northern Syria, pressing ahead
despite the objections of foreign governments which fear Syria's
disintegration. Kurdish and
government forces have mostly avoided confrontation since the start of
the Syrian uprising in 2011. Syria's opposition accuses Kurdish
groups that control the northeast of cooperating with President Bashar
al-Assad. They deny this. The
Kurdish official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was
not an official Asayish spokesman, said Kurdish forces had seized three
positions from government forces in the course of the fighting,
including the prison. The Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights, a British-based group tracking the war,
said the fighting began after the Asayish stopped a car carrying an
officer of a militia that operates under the control of the Syrian army.
It also reported an explosion that was likely to have been from a car
bomb. The Kurdish official said the violence was triggered by Syrian government arrests and attacks on civilians. The Syrian government still controls a few areas in the city center, and its airport.
Battle between Syrian government, Kurdish force kills 26: Kurdish official
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