Syria’s
Democratic Union Party, the country’s most powerful Kurdish group, hopes to
create an autonomous Kurdish region in a federal Syria, its chief, Salih
Muslim, told AFP in an interview.
Speaking
during a visit to France, he confirmed that a commission is in the process of
preparing a constitution for the northeastern and northwestern regions of Syria
that are majority Kurdish.
“The
[Syrian] Kurdistan region will be divided into three autonomous provinces:
Kobani (center), Afrin (west) and Qamishli (east),” he told AFP on Sunday,
speaking through a Kurdish-French translator.
“The
goal is not to secede, but the Kurds want a federal system in Syria,” he said.
Syria’s
Kurds make up around 15 percent of the population and are mostly concentrated
in the northeast and northwest of the country, along the Turkish and Iraqi
borders.
They
have walked a careful line during Syria’s uprising, declining to actively join
either the government or the rebels, and instead focusing on building autonomy
in Kurdish-majority regions.
The
Syrian government withdrew troops from those regions in mid-2012 and focused
its energies elsewhere.
The
armed wing of the PYD took over security in the areas, and has kept armed
rebels out as part of a tacit deal to ensure that regime troops will also stay
out.
On
November 12, the PYD and other Kurdish parties announced the establishment of
an autonomous transitional administration.
“It’s
not the creation of an autonomous government. However, 19 representatives were
chosen in July to prepare a constitution and an electoral law and to define the
mechanisms by which the region will be led,” Muslim said.
“This
commission has finished its work, and a date will soon be set for elections,”
he added.
The
move to consolidate their autonomy on the ground, comes as the armed wing of
the PYD battles jihadist fighters that have sought to control Kurdish areas.
The
Kurdish region to Syria’s east includes oilfields, and runs along the border
with Iraq, providing Jihadist a key route for fighters and supplies.
Muslim
said Kurdish forces were facing off against Jihadists “supported and sent by
the Turkish government,” adding that the fight was continuing.
“We
have been helped by our people, the Iraqi Kurds, the Iraqi president (Jalal
Talabani, a Kurd) and by the PKK,” Muslim said.
The PKK
or Kurdistan Workers Party is a Kurdish organization that has fought for rights
in Turkey and is considered a terrorist group by the United States and other
countries.
Muslim’s
PYD is considered close to the group, though it has denied being a Syrian
branch.
Muslim
insisted that Syria’s Kurdish regions, which are also home to Arab Syrians,
would welcome everyone.
“There
are three sorts of Arabs among us: there are those with whom we have always
lived and who we have fought alongside. We defend the brotherhood between these
peoples,” he said.
“There
are those who do not belong, Arabs who came from outside, other countries or
the region, the Jihadist who have burned our homes, and decapitated Kurds,” he
added.
“Finally,
there are the Arabs who were moved to Kurdistan by force by (former Syrian
president) Hafez al-Assad... to Arabize the region,” Muslim said.
“They are victims... and we advocate a
peaceful solution for these populations: those who can return to their
hometowns should do so and the others can live in peace with the Kurds.”
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