Syrian Human rights Observatory said more than 60 opposition fighters were killed in violence that has raged in the northeastern province of Hassakeh this week. Pro-government Kurdish fighters captured a major checkpoint Saturday morning in the province after intense clashes with al-Qaida-linked rebels, the Observatory said.
Kurdish gunmen captured
mortars, jeeps with heavy machine guns mounted on them as well as large amounts
of weapons at the checkpoint that sits on a main road intersection in Hassakeh,
the group said.
The Kurdish forces,
which back Assad, have fought rebels from radical Islamic groups in the
northern region for months now.
Those killed in the
fighting include 19 Kurdish fighters of the pro-government Kurdish Democratic
Union Party, or PYD, as well as 35 al-Qaida-linked fighters from the Jabhat
al-Nusra or Nusra Front and the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, the
Observatory said.
PYD spokesman Nawaf
Khalil told the U.S.-funded Radio Sawa that Kurds plan to set up an
administration in the predominantly Kurdish region to run its affairs.
"Is it possible for
an area twice the size of Lebanon to remain for the next 10 years without an
interim administration and without special constitutions for the Kurds?"
Khalil asked in remarks broadcast Saturday. "We need a process that makes
us administer the region in a better way."
Last year, as the
fighting intensified in the northern province of Aleppo, Assad's forces were
stretched thin and pulled back from mainly Kurdish towns and villages near the
Turkish border, ceding control to armed Kurdish fighters.
Since then, Syria's
Kurdish minority carved out a once unthinkable degree of independence in their
areas, creating their own police forces, issuing their own license plates and
exuberantly going public with their language and culture.
Kurds, the largest
ethnic minority in Syria, make up more than 10 percent of the country's 23
million people and have seen their loyalties split in the conflict between pro-
and anti-Assad groups. The minority is centered in the poor northeastern
regions of Hassakeh and Qamishli, wedged in between the borders of Turkey and
Iraq. Damascus and Aleppo also have several predominantly Kurdish
neighborhoods.
More than 93,000 people
have been killed since the Syria crisis started in March 2011, according to the
United Nations, as largely peaceful protests against Assad's rule. It escalated
into a civil war after opposition supporters took up arms to fight a brutal
government crackdown on dissent.
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