Iraq: Syria's Kurds will send two delegations to upcoming peace
talks, one with the opposition coalition and another with representatives of
President Bashar al-Assad, opposition leader Ahmed Jarba said Friday.
"The Kurds will participate in
the Geneva meeting in two delegations," Jarba, leader of the National
Coalition, told AFP during a visit to the Kawergosk Syrian refugee camp in
Iraq's autonomous Kurdistan region.
The Geneva 2 peace talks are scheduled to open in Montreux, Switzerland on January 22.
There will be "a delegation
within the (opposition) coalition and a regime delegation," Jarba said,
without saying who was who.
But it seems likely that the Kurdish
National Council (KNC), which is part of the opposition coalition, will attend
with opposition representatives, while the People's Council of Western
Kurdistan (PCWK), which is seen as close to the regime, will accompany the
government representatives.
The main group in the PCWK is the
Democratic Union Party (PYD), which is the most powerful armed Kurdish
organisation in Syria.
The KNC and PCWK, the two main
Syrian Kurdish groups, have been at odds since the latter announced last month
a transitional autonomous administration for Kurdish-majority areas of
northeastern and northwestern Syria without the former's backing.
Since Tuesday, they have been
holding talks in Arbil, the capital of Iraqi Kurdistan, aimed at establishing a
unified front ahead of the talks.
"We held a series of meetings
with our brothers in the People's Council of Western Kurdistan, with the aim of
unifying the Kurdish stance more and more," KNC spokesman Nassereddin
Ibrahim told AFP.
Ibrahim said the goal was still for
an independent Kurdish delegation, but if that does not happen, "we will
speak with a shared vision," and "the two delegations (will)
represent the will of the Kurdish people in Syria, for the sake of a democratic
Syria."
More than 126,000 people have been killed
in the 33-month civil war.
But Kurdish-majority areas of the
country's northeast were relatively quiet until clashes broke out this year
between Kurdish militia and jihadist rebels.
The fighting pushed tens of
thousands of Syrian Kurds across the border into Iraqi Kurdistan, which the
United Nations says now hosts moe than 203,000 Syrian refugees, the vast
majority of those in Iraq. AFP
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