Category: Syria

  • Syrian embassy accused of threatening protesters in UK

    UK activists say Assad agents have visited and intimidated them at home as campaigners fear for their Syrian families’ safety

    * Matthew Taylor

    * guardian.co.uk, Wednesday 22 June 2011 21.35 BST

    A Syrian refugee and child in Turkey. Protesters in Britain have claimed that agents of the Assad regime have threatened them and their families in Syria. Photograph: Adem Altan/AFP/Getty
    A Syrian refugee and child in Turkey. Protesters in Britain have claimed that agents of the Assad regime have threatened them and their families in Syria. Photograph: Adem Altan/AFP/Getty

    Claims that Syrians involved in anti-government protests in the UK have been threatened and intimidated by agents of the Assad regime have prompted discussions between Scotland Yard and Foreign Office officials.

    Syrians who have protested in London say they have received phone calls and visits to their homes, while members of their families in Syria have been threatened.

    One man described how the country’s secret police had visited his parents’ home warning them to stop him taking part in any further demonstrations after he was photographed outside the embassy in London. Another said he had been warned not to mix with the demonstrators by a Syrian official after a protest this month.

    The demonstrators say that although the embassy does not have the power to arrest expatriates, the regime can attempt to control their behaviour by intimidating and detaining their relatives, or threatening to arrest them if they return to Syria.

    The Foreign Office said it had been made aware of claims that Syria’s embassy has photographed protesters, and that those images have been shown to their families in Syria in an attempt to harass them.

    “We are looking into these reports and discussing them with the police. We urge anyone who’s been the subject of any intimidation to report it to the police,” said a Foreign Office spokesman.

    The Syrian embassy denied the claims, insisting it served the entire Syrian community, irrespective of an individual’s political beliefs or actions. But a friend of three people whose families have been persecuted said that they were “extremely frightened” and were deciding whether to press ahead with their claims against the Syrian regime.

    “It has to be understood that this is extremely serious for these people and their families,” said the London-based activist, who did not want to be named for fear of reprisals. “They are worried about what has happened and the publicity around them and what that could mean for their families. They are considering carefully what to do next.”

    A spokesman for the Metropolitan police said it had no knowledge of any complaint being made against the Syrian embassy, but added it was aware of the allegations. The Foreign Office urged any of those who felt they had been intimidated or threatened to come forward.

    “Any such action [by the Syrian embassy] would be wholly wrong and unacceptable,” said a spokesman. “We’ve taken action in the past against diplomats whose activities were inappropriate and contrary to the interests of the UK, and we would do so again.”

    Since the start of the Arab spring a number of regimes have been accused of intimidating their UK-based citizens. In April the Foreign Office condemned the Bahrain government when students on scholarships in Britain had their funding withdrawn after attending anti-government protests. The students said the regime had put intense pressure on their families after they were photographed attending a peaceful protest in Manchester in solidarity with the country’s pro-democracy movement.They said they feared their relatives could suffer beatings and torture as a result of the Bahrain government’s crackdown and that they were likely to be arrested upon their return.

    In May the UK expelled two Libyan diplomats over allegations they were operating against UK-based demonstrators opposed to Muammar Gaddafi. The Foreign Office refused to comment on the behaviour which led to the expulsion of the diplomats and their dependants, but it was widely reported that they are suspected of seeking to intimidate pro-opposition Libyans .

    via Syrian embassy accused of threatening protesters in UK | World news | The Guardian.

  • Worry over PKK, Kurds shape Turkey’s Syria policy

    Worry over PKK, Kurds shape Turkey’s Syria policy

    By Aaron Stein for Southeast European Times in Istanbul – 22/06/11

    The potential for unrest in Syria’s Kurdish populated areas sparks concern. [Reuters]

    ”]The potential for unrest in Syria's Kurdish populated areas sparks concern. [Reuters]Ankara’s partnership with Damascus is crumbling in the wake of Syria’s uprising and brutal government crackdown. Since events spiraled out of control, one of the major looming issues for Turkish security planners is how the chaos, and the threat of Syrian collapse, will impact Turkey’s domestic Kurdish problem and the fight against the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK).

    Syria’s normally restive Kurdish population in the northeast of the country, contiguous to the Kurdish populated regions of Turkey and Iraq, have so far not been the centre of anti-regime protests and regime crackdowns. However, the prospect of a harsh military response in Kurdish populated areas, similar to those occurring in the Arab populated northwestern Syria, and the resultant refugee flows to Turkey’s border, have Turkish policy makers worried.

    There is also a fear that, “if Syria were to destabilise further, the PKK could find a new safe haven in Syria or amongst the Syrian Kurds, similar to the situation in northern Iraq,” Saban Kardas, assistant professor of international relations at TOBB University of Economics and Technology, told SETimes.

    The threat posed by Kurdish nationalism and separatist violence has underpinned Turkey’s relationship with Syria since the mid-1980s. Up until 1998, the relationship was marred by Syria’s harbouring of PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan.

    After agreeing to kick out the PKK leader in 1998 and Ocalan’s subsequent capture, relations between the two countries improved dramatically. In the wake of the war in Iraq in 2003, Syria and Turkey bolstered security ties in order to contain the perceived threat of growing Kurdish nationalism.

    Turkey invested a lot in cultivating its relationship with Syria, often resisting calls by the United States to isolate the regime for its ties to Iran, meddling in Lebanon and Iraq, and its support for Hamas.

    Warming relations with Syria was seen as “the best example of Turkey’s changing foreign policy”, said Kardas, adding that “It was the cornerstone of Turkey’s Middle East policy.”

    Maintaining regional stability is Turkey’s primary foreign policy priority. Wary of upsetting the status quo, Ankara has rejected rapid regime change in favour of an “evolutionary style, which would transition from an authoritarian regime to a democratic one through slow, structural and peaceful changes”, Nuh Yilmaz, director of the Foundation for Political, Economic and Social Research (SETA) in Washington told SETimes.

    At the outset of the al-Assad regime’s bloody crackdown, Turkey reacted cautiously but “the refugee crisis has forced Prime Minister Erdogan’s hand politically,” William Hale, SOAS Emeritus professor told SETimes. “He [Erdogan] could not go on sitting on the fence saying that his good friend [al-Assad] would somehow turn Syria into a democratic government.”

    Since the outbreak of hostilities, over 10,000 Arab refugees have fled Syria for Turkey, drawing comparisons to the flood of Kurdish refugees that escaped Saddam Hussein’s brutal crackdown in 1991. Turkey and allied forces responded by establishing a safe zone on the Iraqi side of the border with Turkey to protect refugees and provide humanitarian relief — which was later expanded into a protectorate over the Iraqi Kurds in the form of a no-fly zone. Amidst the chaos, the PKK was able to consolidate its positions in northern Iraq and launch cross border raids in Turkey.

    Meanwhile, the Turkish press has reported that the Turkish military has developed plans to create a buffer zone in northern Syria in the event of regime collapse, sectarian violence, and mass refugee flows to Turkey.

    This content was commissioned for SETimes.com.

    via Worry over PKK, Kurds shape Turkey’s Syria policy (SETimes.com).

  • Learning human rights lessons from Turkey?

    Learning human rights lessons from Turkey?

    Turkey promised to keep its borders open for the people fleeing the violence in Syria. Many thousands of Syrians have crossed into Turkey and footage shows men and women, children walking into that country.

    Even though Turkey is a country with a large population of over seventy million and already coping with an overflow of many other nationalities, it has not lost its humanity in doing the right thing by extending its hospitality to those so much worse off. They are quickly opening disused buildings and building camps, constructing a temporary hospital.

    If Turkey can do it, where is our compassion?

    Lack of ‘humaneness’ is what seems to doggedly divide Australia from most of the rest of the world with a deeply engrained hostility towards others. It is especially directed to those hapless victims of endless wars that somehow managed to make it anywhere near our shores.

    Our present minister and previous Government ministers have exalted in, ‘we must make conditions here as harsh as possible as a deterrent’. The general gist of the messages from our ‘Leaders’ has been very constant, ‘No-one, we repeat, no-one should come here under the understanding they will be treated with compassion or care if they jump the ‘queue’ or come ‘illegal’ by boat,’ is what they mainly are saying. The political leaders are well aware that those sentiments will be well rewarded with the approval of thousand of voters.

    The latest threat of sending at least 800 refugees to Malaysia just about takes the cake in the manoeuvring of our desperate Government keen to further whip up our xenophobia. The fact that this whipping might be translated to a caning in Malaysia was just seen as a mere bagatelle, easily overcome with a few soothing words of a promise that that would most likely not happen. The UNHCR seems less convinced.

    While the conversation is continuing and a flurry of visits to New Guinea and Nauru intending to underline our tough stance once again, some might question where this dreadful fear comes from. Is there something in our history that gives us clues?

    We couldn’t do much wrong by visiting our most recent history of how we treated children, both in our mother country of the UK and in our own.

    Just having seen the film Oranges and Sunshine and previously read David Hill’s, The Forgotten Children, I wonder if one day we might admit there was something rotten going on in our culture dating back perhaps hundreds of years. I know of no other country that exported and deported over 130,000 children in recent times. I also know of no other country that then allowed the further destruction of those children in the institutions they arrived at.

    Is it is the history of bullying children and sending them into the hierarchical system of the English Boarding Schools, the Public (Private) Schools with its whipping masters and the degrading of all those coming into contact with the ‘British system’ of parenting and educating?

    This seems to go to the very heart of why Australia has never managed to shake of that bullying that defined us from the very start.

    Yet, when it comes to cattle or suicidal whales we all get teary eyed, ban the export of cattle or stand in the sea for days stroking dying whales. Where is the stroking for the flotsam of humans cast on our shores?

    Last Monday’s Four Corners: again ‘bullying and degrading’ at the very core of our armed forces. It is totally ‘us’ and not just the isolated few of ‘them’. Howard, Ruddock, Abbott, Gillard, Morrison, Bowen. What chance did they all have growing up and indoctrinated into a system of bullying? No Government except the British conduct parliament so appallingly and again, bullying is at the very heart of it.

    In the meantime we should take a leaf out of Turkey’s book. We will not turn them away, is what the Turkish Minister for Immigration is reported as saying. They are human beings in distress.

    I can’t even imagine one of our politicians saying that.

    via Learning human rights lessons from Turkey? – The Drum Opinion (Australian Broadcasting Corporation).

  • With Syria on fire between them, Turkey and Israel move to avoid a new fiasco at sea

    With Syria on fire between them, Turkey and Israel move to avoid a new fiasco at sea

    Posted by Karl Vick

    Flotilla flagship drops out after Turkey sizes up the potential damage to delicate balance of relations with Israel, Washington

    It’s hard to overstate the zesty potency of the words “Mavi Marama” in Turkey. Giant posters on Istanbul’s busiest streets trumpet the impending return to sea of the ferry that Israeli commandos intercepted in the Mediterranean a year ago, killing nine activists en route to break the Israeli blockade on the Gaza Strip. The botched raid set back Israel’s public image yet again, and threatened to totally fracture relations between erstwhile allies who have yet to find their way back to common ground.

    But that may be changing with the news that the Marmara will not be part of the sequel flotilla preparing to depart. Instead of serving as flagship, the vessel will remain at dock undergoing repairs, according to an official version of events that, really, no one much believes. By all appearances, what’s actually occurred is quiet diplomacy: Israel (and, surely, Washington) prevailing on Ankara, which in turn prevailed upon the Humanitarian Aid Foundation, the Islamic charity known by its Turkish acronym IHH, which quietly withdrew from the project on Friday.

    Only last month, the group was calling news conferences to declare why the new flotilla should go forward even though Israel broadened the list of goods it permitted into the Strip over land crossings — and even though Egypt opened its own border crossing at Rafah to most of Gaza’s 1.5 million residents. “They opened the gate at Rafah, so why are you doing the Mavi Marama?” IHH chairman Bulent Yildirim asked at an Istanbul presser, seated beside two men with beards as full as his own, and a covered woman. His answer to his own question ranged far, touching on international demands to “embargo Israel” and the bad behavior of the Israel Defense Forces after the raid (laptops and credit cards went missing from passenger’s confiscated luggage). “They kill kids picnicking on the shore,” he finally said, meaning the Israelis. “They have the right to a shoreline. That’s why we’re continuing with the Mavi Marmara despite the fact there are other routes.”

    But access to Gaza wasn’t the only thing changing. As the Arab Spring has overturned the region’s politics, Turkish prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has been stepping lively. No longer is it enough to just look tough standing up to Israel in the name of suffering fellow Muslims (even bigger than the phrase “Mavi Marmara” was “bir dikkat! bir dikkat!” [“one minute! one minute!”] his warning, with raised index finger, to Israeli President Shimon Peres at the Davos Economic Forum as he dressed him down for the 2008-9 offensive that killed some 1,400 Palestinians in Gaza). Erdogan remains hugely popular inside and outside Turkey, but Libya sorely tested his government’s “zero problems” foreign policy: the two countries had good relations, with 25,000 Turks working in Libya. But Erdogan, having early on called for Mubarak to step down in Egypt, eventually had to call for Gaddafi to quit.

    Syria presents an even more delicate situation. Erdogan and his wife actually vacationed with the Bashar Assads, which may be help explain why Erdogan continues to call for the Syrian president to institute “reforms” rather than just take a hike. Then there’s the refugee issue: Thousands of Syrians are fleeing into Turkey as the government’s sledge approaches. Israel also shares a border with Syria, and has an even bigger stake in what transpires there, what with Syrian sponsorship of both Hezbollah and Hamas. Washington wants things to calm down, too, on all three fronts. Which is surely one reason Erdogan’s foreign minister earlier this month asked the IHH to pull out of the new flotilla. Things just don’t look so simple as they did a year ago.

    via Flotilla flagship drops out after Turkey sizes up the potential damage to delicate balance of relations with Israel, Washington – Global Spin – TIME.com.

    With Syria on fire between them, Turkey and Israel move to avoid a new fiasco at sea

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  • 24 reported slain in Syrian protests

    24 reported slain in Syrian protests

    Security forces fire on demonstrators, as protests are held in several cities after Friday prayers. The U.S. and its allies are said to be weighing additional actions to pressure Syria to end the violence.

    By Borzou Daragahi, Los Angeles Times

    June 17, 2011, 4:46 p.m.
    Reporting from Beirut—

    A Turkish soldier guards at a refugee camp in the town of Boynuyogun in Hatay province. Turkey has called on Syria to immediately halt its violent crackdown on protesters and begin democratic reforms. (Osman Orsal, Reuters / June 18, 2011)
    A Turkish soldier guards at a refugee camp in the town of Boynuyogun in Hatay province. Turkey has called on Syria to immediately halt its violent crackdown on protesters and begin democratic reforms. (Osman Orsal, Reuters / June 18, 2011)

    A Turkish soldier guards at a refugee camp in the town of Boynuyogun in Hatay province. Turkey has called on Syria to immediately halt its violent crackdown on protesters and begin democratic reforms. (Osman Orsal, Reuters / June 18, 2011)

    Syria suffered through another agonizing day of bloodshed Friday as security forces fired on antigovernment protesters after weekly prayers in several cities across the country.

    Human rights activists said at least 24 unarmed people were killed in the violence.

    Amateur video showed security forces in military vehicles shooting at children in the southern town of Dail, where activists say a 13-year-old boy was killed and a 16-year-old was critically wounded.

    Another clip showed panicking protesters dashing for cover as gunfire erupted in the streets of Homs. Weeping men could be seen carrying the limp body of a man who had apparently been shot in the face.

    Syria’s three-month uprising has become the greatest challenge ever to the longtime authoritarian rule of President Bashar Assad and his family. The regime has responded with a brutal military crackdown laden with sectarian overtones.

    The developments have sent shock waves across the region and beyond.

    In Washington, a senior Obama administration official said the size and persistence of the protests showed that “the fear factor is no longer enough to keep people at home.” Some Syrian opposition members are meeting daily with U.S. Ambassador Robert S. Ford and other embassy officials in Damascus, despite the risk, according to U.S. officials.

    The officials said the administration and its allies were weighing measures to pressure Assad, including imposing additional sanctions on Syria’s oil and gas sector. Also under consideration is a recommendation that the International Criminal Court consider charges against members of the Assad regime for the violence against protesters.

    Assad’s regime is dominated by Alawites, a small Shiite Muslim offshoot that is estimated to make up 10% of Syria’s population. The majority of Syrians are Sunni Muslims.

    In neighboring Lebanon, fresh clashes Friday in a mixed Alawite-Sunni district of Tripoli left at least four people dead and 22 injured. The violence erupted after anti-Assad activists held a large protest in the coastal city, Lebanon’s official news agency reported.

    Late Thursday, Assad’s unpopular and powerful cousin, telecommunications tycoon Rami Makhlouf, said he was withdrawing from business and would devote his profits to charity, a claim that could not be verified.

    “I will not allow for myself to be a burden on Syria, its people or president. I will put into circulation part of the shares that I possess of Syriatel Mobile Telecom for Syrian citizens with limited income,” he said in a televised appearance.

    Makhlouf is already blacklisted by the European Union as one of 13 regime figures behind the violence that, according to rights activists, has killed 1,300 people in three months.

    Protesters and activists did not appear to be deterred by the increasingly violent crackdown nor impressed by Makhlouf’s assertion. On social networking websites, they mocked him as “Mother Rami Teresa” and took to the streets to voice their complaints. One activist in the Syrian city of Latakia, who declined to be identified, said the shares were never his to begin with.

    “He was made of corruption, and his companies were not made of clean money,” said another Syrian activist, Hozan Ibrahim, who lives in Europe. “That statement was a dirty game by the regime and did nothing and was done in vain. People didn’t believe it.”

    Video posted on the Internet showed peaceful protesters at campuses in the capital, Damascus, and its suburbs, as well as in Aleppo, the country’s second-largest city. Other video showed large protests in Homs, the third-largest city; the central city of Hama; and the Kurdish cities of Qamishli and Amouda.

    An activist reached by telephone in Homs said thousands had taken to the streets in several neighborhoods.

    “The demonstrators from various protests in the city tried to join together, but security forces fired tear gas into the crowds to disperse the protests,” said the activist, who spoke on condition of anonymity. They also chanted in support of Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, whose government this week dramatically chilled once-warm ties with Syria over human rights abuses.

    “Erdogan, you are the hope for Syrians,” they chanted, according to the activist.

    Another video clip uploaded to the Internet showed activists in Latakia ready to set fire to the flags of Iran, Russia and the militant group Hezbollah, all friends of Assad’s regime.

    “The people want the overthrow of the regime,” they chanted.

    Protests were also reported in the northwestern city of Idlib, the scene in recent weeks of a massive security crackdown; the besieged cities of the Dara region in the south; the coastal city of Baniyas; and Dair Alzour, on the Euphrates River, near the Iraqi border, where troops are massing for what may be a major security operation.

    Activists, using themes each Friday to highlight different aspects of the protest movement, dedicated this week’s effort to Sheik Salih ibn Ali, an Alawite leader who fought for Syria’s independence from France in the 1920s. Assad, also an Alawite, has been sharpening sectarian divisions in Syria and the region by deploying troops led by his co-religionists against the Sunni majority.

    The unrest, and the regime’s continuing use of military force to quell peaceful protests, has sent thousands of Syrians into neighboring countries, especially Turkey, which has set up tent camps to house an exodus that has reached 10,000 so far.

    Actress Angelina Jolie, a goodwill ambassador for the Office of the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees, arrived by private plane Friday in southeastern Turkey to visit refugees in an effort to bring attention to their plight.

    [email protected]

    Special correspondent Alexandra Sandels in Beirut, a special correspondent in Damascus and Times staff writer Paul Richter in Washington contributed to this report.

  • Unrest in Syria inspires Kurdish activism

    Unrest in Syria inspires Kurdish activism

    untitledAs the momentum of opposition demonstrations targeting Syrian President Bashar al-Assad gains in the face of an increasingly violent crackdown by the state, questions are emerging as to the survivability of a regime widely considered to be among the most autocratic in the region.

    Like others in the Arab world toiling under decades of authoritarianism, Syrians are protesting against the absence of democratic freedoms, the disregard for human rights and the corruption pervading their society. As legitimate grievances engendered over time define a discourse of dissent, underserved segments of Syrian society, including persecuted ethnic minorities such as the sizeable Kurdish community, are also finding their voices.

    Encompassing all corners of the country, the unrest in Syria has reached the northern and northeastern provinces where most of the country’s ethnic Kurdish minority population reside, particularly in Aleppo, al-Raqqa, and, especially, al-Hasakah province, which borders Kurdish-dominated regions of Turkey and Iraq. Kurdish neighborhoods and towns across other parts of Syria are also witnessing displays of dissent.

    The specter of Kurdish nationalism continues to haunt governments in the region that rule over restive Kurdish populations, namely Turkey, Iraq and Iran, as well as Syria. Initially, there was little evidence to indicate that Syrian Kurds were expressing their grievances amid the current uprising through an ethno-nationalist lens analogous to the calls for autonomy or independence by Kurds in Turkey and Iran, which are experiencing Kurdish insurgencies, or Iraq, where Kurds enjoy a quasi-independent status guaranteed through Iraq’s federalization.

    Most Syrian Kurds appear to be venting their ire against the state as Syrians, not as Kurds. At a rally in the town of al-Amouda, in al-Hasakah province, protestors chanted “God, Syria, freedom, and that’s it”, a play on a popular Ba’athist chant, “God, Syria, Assad, and that’s it”. Protestors also carried Syrian flags and banners reading “Respect for the heroes of freedom” and “We are all Syria”.

    Yet there have been instances where Kurdish grievances were articulated through a Kurdish nationalist discourse. At a March 20 rally during celebrations marking the festival of Nowruz (Persian New Year) that is traditionally commemorated by Syrian Kurds (though repressed by authorities) in the largely Kurdish city of al-Qamishli (also in al-Hasakah province), demonstrators brandished Kurdish flags while leading chants of “long live Kurdistan”.

    Given these trends, the manner in which political instability in Syria impacts the position and expectations of Syrian Kurds and, more broadly, the larger question of Kurdish nationalism in the Middle East, warrants closer examination.

    Western Kurdistan
    The Middle East is in the throes of a reinvigorated Kurdish nationalism following the establishment of what, in essence, represents a semi-independent Kurdish state that emerged under the auspices of the Kurdish Regional Government (KRG) in northern Iraq.

    Depending on the political leanings of the sources, demographic data regarding Kurdish minorities are often heavily politicized as many as 30 million Kurds live as marginalized ethnic minorities who experience social, cultural, linguistic, and political discrimination in a transnational territory spread over Turkey, Iraq, Iran, and Syria or, as Kurdish nationalists like to call it, “Greater Kurdistan”.

    In this context, the territory occupied by Syrian Kurds is considered “Western Kurdistan” or “Syrian Kurdistan”. The Kurdish population in Syria is estimated to number between 1.5 to 2 million out of a total of around 22 million Syrians, making it the largest non-Arab minority in one of the region’s most ethnically and religiously diverse countries.

    Kurds in Syria are forbidden to use the Kurdish language in education and other official venues. Other expressions of Kurdish identity are either prohibited or strongly circumscribed to satisfy the regime. Kurds also are also among the poorest communities in Syria and influential Kurdish figures are subject to arbitrary arrest and torture. Most Syrian Kurds are Sunni Muslims, but the community includes significant numbers of Alawites, Shiites, Christians and adherents of other smaller sects. Syrian Kurds also share ties with familial and tribal networks that extend over the borders into Turkey and Iraq, as well as a sense of transnational Kurdish identity.

    Tensions between the Syrian state and the Kurdish community, while modest in scale compared with the experiences of Turkey, Iraq, and Iran in terms of the amount of bloodshed over the years, are nevertheless real. A series of incidents in recent years is illustrative of the hostilities simmering below the surface in Syrian society in regard to the position of the Kurdish minority.

    For example, in March 2004 a heated exchange between rival Kurdish and Arab football fans in al-Qamishli took on political overtones as Kurds reportedly brandished Kurdish flags and chanted slogans praising then US president George W Bush and Iraqi Kurdish leaders Massoud Barzani and Jalal Talabani. Subsequent clashes between the fans prompted a heavy-handed crackdown by security forces that left 36 dead and hundreds injured, most of them Kurds.

    The incident prompted Kurds to organize across Syria, leading to further clashes between Kurds and the security forces and attacks by Kurds against symbols of the state. This period of hostilities represented the largest display of domestic disorder witnessed in Syria in decades. Less dramatic displays of unrest among Kurds have also prompted clashes with Syrian security forces in Kurdish neighborhoods of major urban centers such as Damascus and Aleppo.

    A question of citizenship
    Kurdish immigrants from neighboring Turkey made their way to Syria from the 1920s to the 1950s to escape poverty and seek out the fertile but uncultivated farmland available in al-Hasakah province. In 1962, Syrian authorities revoked the citizenship of 120,000 Kurds in al-Hasakah on the grounds they were not born there.

    The rise of Arab nationalism also placed Kurds in a difficult position in relation to the authorities in Damascus, with Kurds being viewed as a threat to Syrian unity and sovereignty. [1] Known locally as al-ajanib (“the foreigners”), the Kurds in Syria lacking citizenship number as high as 300,000. Treated as foreigners by the state, Kurds lacking citizenship are forbidden to own property, enroll in state universities, work in public sector jobs, or obtain a Syrian passport to travel abroad.

    Some tens of thousands among this community, known as al-maktoumeen (“the hidden”), lack even basic identification cards, making it impossible to receive health care and other services available even to the Kurds who lack citizenship.

    Seizing the opportunity to vent their frustrations amid the upheaval, Syrian Kurds remain in the forefront of anti-government demonstrations. Syrian Kurds in Lebanon (a popular destination for Syrian guest workers) have taken to the streets of Beirut and other cities in a show of solidarity with their fellow Kurds back home. In an effort to mollify Kurdish protestors, President al-Assad issued a decree on April 7 granting Syrian nationality to Kurds lacking the required credentials. In a related move designed to curry favor with the Kurdish community, 48 Kurdish political prisoners were also released from prison after being detained for over a year for political activities.

    In spite of the regime’s systematic efforts to suppress Kurdish identity in Syria, until the late 1990s the regional geopolitics of the time dictated that Damascus support Kurdish nationalism against Turkey. Syria provided extensive operational and logistical support for the Partiya Karkeren Kurdistan (Kurdistan Workers’ Party – PKK), a militant group that has oscillated between calls for independence and autonomy for Turkish Kurds.

    Much has been said of the friendly shift in Syrian-Turkish relations in recent years. At one point, however, these countries had a contentious relationship. Territorial disputes stemming from Syria’s claim for Turkey’s southern Hatay Province as well as disagreements over Turkey’s water usage (the construction of a network of dams along the upper Euphrates River reduced Syria’s access to vital water resources) characterized relations between Syria and Turkey for decades. Turkey’s alliance with Israel, Syria’s regional archrival, was also behind Syrian support for the PKK.

    Syria’s support for the PKK was such that Damascus turned a blind eye to the group’s recruitment of thousands of Syrian Kurds. With little regard for the plight of Syrian Kurds or their attachment to Syria, PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan boldly suggested that Syrian Kurds would consider moving back to Turkey, presumably after the establishment of an independent state, or at least, an autonomous Kurdish region within Turkey.

    This position meshed perfectly with Syria’s policy of highlighting the “foreignness” of many of its Kurds in its efforts to suppress Kurdish identity. [2] Tensions reached their peak when Turkey threatened to invade Syria in 1998 over the latter’s support for the PKK. The marked improvement in relations between the former rivals is best seen in the development of bilateral security relations. Having abandoned its support for the PKK, Damascus is now actively cooperating with Turkey to root out the group.

    In a recent example of Syrian-Turkish cooperation, Syrian authorities extradited two PKK members wanted for alleged involvement in militant activities to Turkey in May. At least 125 alleged members of the PKK have been handed over to Turkey by Syria since 1998.

    A spillover effect
    Facing a steady rise in attacks by the PKK, Turkey has expressed concerns over the deterioration of order in Syria, especially in its Kurdish regions, and the potential impact on the PKK and the trajectory of Kurdish nationalism more broadly.

    While Turkey was able to count on Syria to work to prevent its territory from being used by PKK guerillas in operations against Turkey, the ongoing turmoil gripping Syria is preoccupying Damascus with far more pressing matters. Making matters worse for Turkey, the unrest in Syria has occurred against the backdrop of threats issued by the PKK to sow chaos across Turkey through a campaign of violence, terrorism, and public unrest in the run-up to general elections scheduled for June 12.

    There is evidence that the PKK is exploiting the tumult in Syria to bolster its operations. On April 1, Turkish forces clashed with PKK guerillas in southern Hatay province, killing seven militants. Turkish forces also seized a cache of arms and explosives, including rifles, rocket launchers, grenades, and plastic explosives. The guerillas reportedly infiltrated the border from neighboring Syria.

    Turkish authorities also claim to have foiled two other attempts by the PKK to infiltrate the border from Syria in January and February. Furthermore, the PKK was implicated in an attack against the security convoy accompanying Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan in the northern city of Kastamonu on May 1, which left one dead and two wounded. An explosion at a bus stop in Istanbul on May 26, which left eight injured, was also blamed on the PKK.

    In addition to the Syrian crisis potentially strengthening the PKK’s capacity to operate within Turkey by providing a staging area and logistical hub for planning and mounting attacks, Turkey is also wary of the impression that an emboldened Syrian Kurdish community could leave on its own Kurdish population amid a renewed push by Kurdish nationalists to ramp up the pressure on Ankara.

    The PKK is watching events in Syria closely. Lamenting the loss of its onetime ally due to Syria’s rapprochement with Turkey, PKK founding member Cemil Bayik referred to Syria as a “province” of Turkey in a statement published on the PKK’s official website. Most recently, the PKK has called on Syria to negotiate with the Kurds. Murat Karayilan, the group’s acting commander, proposed that Syria provide autonomy for its Kurdish community and recognize Kurdish identity, while adding: “If Kurds revolt [in Syria] it would have much more effect” than the revolts in the Arab community.”

    In light of the threat posed by the PKK, a lesser but nevertheless pressing concern for Turkey stems from the prospect of al-Qaeda-style militants exploiting the instability in Syria to mount attacks against Turkey. Turkish authorities recently announced they had uncovered a plot by al-Qaeda to attack southeastern Turkey’s Incirlik Air Force Base, a major hub for US and Turkish air forces. Authorities suggested the attacks were to have been executed by two Syrian militants.

    Conclusion
    As the protests and counter-protests persist across Syria, Kurds appear determined to continue to agitate for greater rights as both Syrians and Kurds. Overtures by the state aimed at appeasing Kurdish anger are not likely to have much of an impact.

    With the PKK having upped the ante in its campaign against Ankara while demonstrating a growing interest in the plight of Kurds in Syria during the current turmoil, events in Turkey may also come to shape the course of events for Kurds in Syria. Syria’s Kurds have not yet opted for organized violent resistance to achieve their goals, even while participating in militant actions involving Kurds outside of Syria. However, while there is no evidence to suggest that Kurds in Syria are prepared to take up arms along the lines of their kin in Turkey, Iraq, and Iran, the further breakdown of order in Syria coupled with harsher crackdowns and greater militancy in neighboring Kurdish communities may prompt a recalibration of Kurdish activist strategy in Syria.

    Chris Zambelis is an author and researcher with Helios Global, Inc, a risk management group based in the Washington, DC area. The opinions expressed here are the author’s alone and do not necessarily reflect the position of Helios Global, Inc.

    Notes
    1. David McDowall, A Modern History of the Kurds (London: I.B. Tauris, 2004), p. 473-74.
    2. Ibid, p. 479-80.

    (This article first appeared in The Jamestown Foundation. Used with permission.)

    (Copyright 2011 The Jamestown Foundation.)