Syria’s embattled President Bashar al-Assad
last month sent a three-man delegation to Qamishli for negotiations with
Kurdish political parties “to resolve the Kurdish issue,” a knowledgeable
source said to RUDWA, Kurdish website.
“A three-man delegation from the Syrian regime, led by Muhammad
Khair Osi, a Kurd with close ties to President Bashar al-Assad, met with the
Kurdish parties in Qamishli last month,” the source, a Syrian Kurdish
politician, told Rudaw on condition of anonymity.
“The delegation delivered a message from President Assad to the
Kurdish officials regarding his desire to start negotiation and resolve the
Kurdish issue,” he added.
According to him, all
Kurdish parties but one have welcomed the Syrian initiative. He did not name
the opposing party, but said that it wants a consensus among Kurdish leaders
before talking to Damascus.
But Abdulsalam Ahmad,
co-chair of the Kurdish National Council (KNC) -- an umbrella group of more
than 10 Kurdish parties -- denied any talks having taken place with the Syrian
regime.
“We didn’t meet with the regime nor did the other Kurdish
political parties meet as far as I know,” Ahmad said.
He added that leaders of
the Democratic Union Party (PYD) – which is affiliated with the Kurdistan
Workers Party (PKK) and has been accused by critics of maintaining secret links
with Damascus -- had rejected the negotiation offer by the regime.
According to Ahmad, the
Syrian delegation’s main condition was that Kurdish groups should declare
openly their talks with the Assad regime.
It is believed that the
Syrian regime hopes to use peace talks with the Kurds and its limited military
success against the Arab rebels as a trump card in the proposed Geneva
Conference.
There has been no clarity
over whether that conference, to end more than two years of civil war that has
killed an estimated 100,000 people, will go ahead.
Ahmad said that as the
second-largest population in Syria, the Kurds have every right to look out for
their best interests.
“We have no problem holding talks with the regime whenever the
Kurdish movement decides such a step is in the best interest of the Syrian
Kurds,” he said.
Ahmad says that the Kurds
stand neutral in the war between Damascus and the Syrian rebels.
“It makes no difference for the Kurds whether they negotiate
with the opposition or with the regime,” he said. “The regime has not yet lost
legitimacy in the international community and it still controls most of Syria.
It has embassies in dozens of countries and is still a member of the UN.”
While denying that the KNC
had approached the regime with a negotiation proposal first, Faisal Yousif, a
KNC member, said negotiating with the Assad regime alone might not solve the
Kurdish issue.
“According to the KNC protocols, we are part of the revolution,”
he said. “We support peaceful solutions for the current crisis, but the Kurdish
issue cannot be resolved by holding negotiations with the regime alone.”
Zaman Alwasl
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