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Syria anti-IS forces must keep ‘special status’: Kurdish commander

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Any deal between Syria's Kurds and Damascus should respect the "special status" of Kurdish-led forces who fought the Islamic State group, a top Kurdish commander of those forces said.

"Any political agreement should include the special status" of the Syrian Democratic Forces after they fought IS "on behalf of all humanity and even the Syrian army", SDF commander-in-chief Mazloum Kobani said.

"This is our red line and we will not concede this" in ongoing talks with the Damascus regime, he told AFP in an exclusive interview on Thursday.

The SDF control around a third of Syria after expelling jihadists from a large northeastern swathe of the war-torn country with backing from the US-led coalition.

The Kurdish-led alliance "protected northeastern Syria... liberated these areas, and have the right to continue protecting the region", said Kobani, who was speaking near the northeastern city of Hasakeh.

President Bashar al-Assad's government has gained ground against rebels and jihadists with key Russian backing since 2015, and now controls almost two-thirds of the country.

It is determined to reassert its authority over SDF-held areas, which make up the lion's share of the rest.

But after years of marginalisation, the Kurds are determined to keep some of the autonomy they gained during the eight-year war.

The SDF could "agree to be part of the national army of a future Syria, but only on the condition they keep their special status", Kobani said.

Damascus has rejected self-rule in northeastern Syria, but Kurdish leaders started talks with the government in July in a bid to seek some form of decentralisation.

"The discussions are ongoing but have not yet reached any positive result," he said.

The regime "keeps on thinking it can go back to the way it was before 2011. It still hopes it can take military control of the whole region".

"It needs... to understand that is impossible."

Kobani said the SDF were however prepared to "protect the Syrian border and the unity of Syrian territory".

And they would "accept the results of centralised elections if they occurred".

Any deal between Syria’s Kurds and Damascus should respect the “special status” of Kurdish-led forces who fought the Islamic State group, a top Kurdish commander of those forces said.

“Any political agreement should include the special status” of the Syrian Democratic Forces after they fought IS “on behalf of all humanity and even the Syrian army”, SDF commander-in-chief Mazloum Kobani said.

“This is our red line and we will not concede this” in ongoing talks with the Damascus regime, he told AFP in an exclusive interview on Thursday.

The SDF control around a third of Syria after expelling jihadists from a large northeastern swathe of the war-torn country with backing from the US-led coalition.

The Kurdish-led alliance “protected northeastern Syria… liberated these areas, and have the right to continue protecting the region”, said Kobani, who was speaking near the northeastern city of Hasakeh.

President Bashar al-Assad’s government has gained ground against rebels and jihadists with key Russian backing since 2015, and now controls almost two-thirds of the country.

It is determined to reassert its authority over SDF-held areas, which make up the lion’s share of the rest.

But after years of marginalisation, the Kurds are determined to keep some of the autonomy they gained during the eight-year war.

The SDF could “agree to be part of the national army of a future Syria, but only on the condition they keep their special status”, Kobani said.

Damascus has rejected self-rule in northeastern Syria, but Kurdish leaders started talks with the government in July in a bid to seek some form of decentralisation.

“The discussions are ongoing but have not yet reached any positive result,” he said.

The regime “keeps on thinking it can go back to the way it was before 2011. It still hopes it can take military control of the whole region”.

“It needs… to understand that is impossible.”

Kobani said the SDF were however prepared to “protect the Syrian border and the unity of Syrian territory”.

And they would “accept the results of centralised elections if they occurred”.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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