Showing posts with label PYD. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PYD. Show all posts

Sunday, July 28, 2013

PYD leader in visit to Turkey proposes formation of provisional council until political solution

 The leader of the Democratic Union Party (PYD), Saleh Muslim came to Istanbul from Arbil on July 25 for two-days talks. AA photo

(hurriyet daily news) The leader of the Democratic Union Party (PYD), Saleh Muslim, who is currently on an unexpected visit to Turkey, has said the Syrian Kurds will seek a "new status" in the new political system to be established in Syria.

Muslim also emphasized the need for a provisional council in the territory controlled by Kurds in northern Syria, which could also comprise Arabs, Syriacs and Turkmens, to ensure governance until the two-year-long conflict reaches a settlement.

"By all means, Kurds will need to have a status in the new order in Syria. But what's in question now is a provisional arrangement until we arrive at that phase. It's not about making a Constitution, but practical rules are necessary," he told Anadolu Agency July 27.

He added that as the main Kurdish group in northern Syria, they weren't intending to "impose" anything on anybody. "No decision has been taken yet. Our thought is to establish a provisional council of 40-50, maybe a hundred people. This council will comprise Kurds, Syriacs, Arabs and Turkmens. They will choose the provisional administration from among themselves," he added.

The outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK)-affiliated PYD has increased its control in the north of Syria after violent clashes between its armed wing and the al-Qaeda-linked al Nusra-Front for over a week.

Turkish officials have expressed strong concerns about the "fait accompli" imposition of a de facto autonomous Kurdish region in the north of Syria. The developments prompted the government to hold an emergency meeting on July 24, which was followed by Muslim's surprise talks.

Meetings with senior Foreign Ministry officials

Muslim confirmed that he had held talks with Foreign Ministry and other senior officials on the recent developments in northern Syria.

"We met first degree officials from the Foreign Ministry and other senior officials. We held talks on various issues. We were already close to each other. [Foreign Minister Ahmet] Davutoğlu had some positive statements. The al-Nusra Front is pursuing a war against us. This is very important and we discussed it with Turkey," Muslim said, stressing that the provisional rule they were intending to establish was causing "misunderstandings" in Ankara.

"We have planted the idea of a provisional administration to ensure delivery of the public services that have been hampered because of the war. The administration will be comprised of all parties in Rojava [the Kurdish northern parts of Syria]. We discussed and talked about these matters," he said.

The PYD leader has also stressed that Syrian Kurds were opposed to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. "We have had a constant policy since the beginning. We are against al-Assad and want him to be overthrown. But because we can't position ourselves with certain sides or send our young people to fight in Damascus as we protect our region, some are displeased. But claims that we are with the regime are baseless. We have been a part of the opposition since the beginning," Muslim said.

He also added that their ties would improve after the election of Ahmad al-Jarba, a tribal leader from the mainly Kurdish Hasaka region in northern Syria, as the new head of opposition.

"We are making efforts to meet the needs in Rojava where mostly Kurds are living. But these efforts are not only directed to Kurds, but also to Arabs, Syriacs and Turkmens living there. We don't want any of them to [be harmed]. We have managed to protect our region until now. Hopefully we can protect it in the future as well," Muslim said.

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan had said that Muslim held talks with intelligence officials along with Foreign Ministry diplomats. The developments also come as the government is working to finalize a democratization package to boost the ongoing Kurdish peace process, which started seven months ago.
From: http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/pyd-leader-in-visit-to-turkey-proposes-formation-of-provisional-council-until-political-solution.aspx?pageID=238&nid=51519&NewsCatID=338

Friday, July 26, 2013

Head of Syrian Kurdish group in Turkey for talks: sources


ANKARA | Fri Jul 26, 2013 5:48am EDT
(Reuters) - The head of a Syrian Kurdish group with links to militants in Turkey was in Istanbul on Friday for talks with government officials after an upsurge in fighting near the border, Kurdish political sources said.
Saleh Muslim, head of the Democratic Union Party (PYD), whose militias have seized control of districts in northern Syria over the past year, arrived in Turkey late on Thursday, the sources told Reuters.
Turkey is keen to extract assurances from the PYD that it will not seek to carry out actions on Turkish soil, will not try to carve out an autonomous region on the border, and that it will maintain a stance of firm opposition to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.
Turkish government officials said there were no plans for any high-level meetings. Some local newspaper reports said Muslim would meet intelligence chief Hakan Fidan and Foreign Ministry officials.
Muslim said last week that the PYD aimed to set up what he said would be an independent council to run Kurdish regions in Syria until the civil war ended, a move likely to alarm Ankara, wary of an autonomous Kurdish region emerging on its border.
Turkey is trying to hold together a delicate peace process with Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) militants on its own soil and is worried that the emergence of an autonomous Kurdish region in Syria could further embolden them and jeopardize that process.
The PKK called a ceasefire this year as part of the efforts to end a three-decade conflict that has claimed 40,000 lives. But a recent increase in violence in the southeast has highlighted the fragility of the process. Kurdish politicians have voiced concern that the government has not been enacting promised reforms quickly enough.
CLASHES
The PYD captured the Syrian border town of Ras al-Ain last week after days of clashes with Islamist rebel fighters from the al-Qaeda linked Nusra Front.
Turkish troops shot at PYD fighters in Syria last week after two rocket-propelled grenades from Syria struck a border post on the Turkish side.
Two Turkish teenagers died when stray bullets from Syria hit the Turkish town of Ceylanpinar, adjacent to Ras al-Ain.
Clashes between PYD and rebels fighting Assad have erupted since Kurds began asserting control over parts of the northeast from late last year.
The anti-Assad revolt has evolved from its origins as a peaceful protest movement in March 2011 into a civil war that has killed over 100,000 people and turned markedly sectarian.
Turkey has emerged as one of the strongest backers of the Syrian rebels, giving them shelter on its soil, but denies arming them. Along with its allies, Ankara has, however, tried to distance itself from hardline Islamist groups like Nusra.
Syria's ethnic Kurdish minority has been alternately battling Assad's forces and the Islamist-dominated rebels. Kurds argue they support the revolt but rebels accuse them of making deals with the government in order to ensure their security and autonomy during the conflict.
(Editing by Nick Tattersall and Robin Pomeroy)