Iraqi Kurds are
digging a 17-km (10-mile) trench on their border with Syria, reinforcing
a political faultline between the two rival parties that dominate on
either side of the frontier. Iraqi Kurdish
authorities say the ditch, which is approximately 3 meters deep and 2
meters wide, will help reduce smuggling and keep Islamist militants out
of their relatively stable region as war grinds on in Syria. But
the Kurdish group that controls the Syrian side of the border says the
ditch is designed to tighten a blockade against its enclave, and force
it to submit to the authority of the ruling Kurdistan Democratic Party
(KDP) in Iraq. Whatever
the motive, the ditch is highly symbolic, fortifying one of the
frontiers regarded by many Kurds as a historic injustice that carved
their ethnic homeland up into four parts spread across Iraq, Turkey,
Iran and Syria. It also
illustrates the growing rifts and competition between Kurds across
borders, and their ties to regional powers. People on the Syrian side
protesting against the ditch have been shoveling soil and using their
bare hands to refill it. In
Syria, the Democratic Union Party (PYD) has emerged as the most
powerful Kurdish political group since civil war broke out more than
three years ago, and in January declared self-rule in the country's
northeast, bordering Turkey and Iraq. Authorities
in the Iraqi Kurdish province of Duhok abutting Syria denied the ditch
was being dug for political reasons and said an official border crossing
remained open for those who wished to travel back and forth. "The
measures that were recently taken in digging a ditch on the Syrian
border are a result of the deterioration of security," read a statement
posted on the Kurdistan Regional Government's (KRG) website. Kurdistan
has largely managed to insulate itself against the violence afflicting
Syria and the rest of Iraq, providing refuge for thousands, but a
bombing last year in the capital Arbil put the region on its guard. That
attack was claimed by the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL),
which is active in Sunni Arab dominated provinces south of the region,
and across the border in Syria, where it has been fighting Kurds. "BARBED WIRE AND WALLS" A
senior KRG official said the ditch was no different from those dug
around the cities of Arbil or Kirkuk for security, but the PYD has
likened it to the "wall of shame" built by Turkey along its boundary
with Syria's Kurdish areas. Turkey
is unnerved by the Kurds' growing clout in Syria, having fought for
three decades on its own soil against the rebel Kurdistan Workers' Party
(PKK), which is close to the PYD. "At
a time when everybody is looking forward for the elimination of barbed
wire and walls dividing Kurdistan, digging border ditches ... is quite
an eye-opening move," the PKK said in a statement. "The
ditch digging ... makes the enemies of the Kurds happy, for they have
always benefited from the divisions and problems among the Kurds". The
PYD accuses those digging the trench of acting on the behest of Ankara,
which has cultivated ties with the KDP, led by Iraqi Kurdistan's
President Massoud Barzani. The KDP backs several smaller parties in Syria that recently merged to form the Kurdistan Democratic Party of Syria (KDPS). Even
before work on the ditch began, the PYD complained it was not allowed
to traverse the border freely, and last year took control of the
Yaaroubiya crossing with Iraq, which lies beyond the control of Iraqi
Kurdistan. The PYD has since been using that border to get aid into Syria, with the approval of the Iraqi central government in Baghdad. The
controversy over the ditch is also being used by the KDP's rivals
within Iraqi Kurdistan ahead of elections at the end of April. A
senior member of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) described the
ditch as "unnecessary" and questioned why it had not been dug sooner if
its real purpose was to secure the region. "We are not happy about it," said a senior PUK member, on condition of anonymity. Reuters
Iraqi Kurds entrench political faultline with Syria border ditch
Zaman Alwasl
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