QAMISHLI, Syria — Thousands of
Kurds protested on Sunday in the Syrian city of Qamishli against days of deadly
Turkish cross-border strikes targeting Kurdish groups in the country’s
northeast.
اضافة اعلان
Turkey announced last Sunday it had carried out air
strikes against semi-autonomous Kurdish zones in north and northeastern Syria,
and across the border in Iraq. It has also threatened a ground offensive in
those areas of Syria.
Demonstrators in Kurdish-controlled Qamishli, in
Hasakeh province, brandished photos of people killed during recent strikes in
the semi-autonomous region, an AFP correspondent said.
“Only the will of the Kurdish people remains,” said
protester Siham Sleiman, 49. “It will not be broken and we remain ready. We
will not leave our historic land.”
After a three-day lull, Turkish fighter jets heavily
bombed Kurdish-controlled areas north of Aleppo early on Sunday, according to
the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a war monitor.
A separate Turkish drone strike killed five Syrian
government soldiers near Tal Rifaat, also north of Aleppo, the observatory
added, reporting an exchange of shelling between Kurdish combatants and Turkish
forces and their Syrian proxies.
Protesters in Qamishli also chanted in favor of the
resistance in “Rojava” — the name Kurds in Syria give to the area they
administer.
“The message that we want to convey to the world is
that we are victims of eradication,” said Salah El-Dine Hamou, 55.
“How long will we continue to die while other
countries watch?”
The Turkish strikes come after a November 13 bombing
in Istanbul that killed six people and wounded 81. Ankara blamed the attack on
the
Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), which it and its Western allies consider a
terrorist group.
The PKK has waged an insurgency against the Turkish
state since 1984. Turkey alleges that Syrian Kurdish fighters are the PKK’s
allies.
Kurdish groups denied any involvement in the Ankara
blast.
Some protesters on Sunday carried Kurdish flags
alongside photos of PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan — jailed in Turkey since 1999 —
and shouted slogans against Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
The Turkish raids
have killed at least 63 Kurdish and allied fighters and Syrian soldiers, as
well as a Kurdish journalist, according to the observatory, which relies on an
extensive network of sources in Syria.
Eight people have been killed in retaliatory
artillery fire, three of them across the Turkish border.
Since 2016, Turkey’s military has conducted three
offensives mostly targeting Kurdish fighters, and captured territory in
northern Syria, which is now held by Ankara-backed proxies.
The US-backed
Syrian Democratic Forces, the Kurds’
de facto army in the area, led the battle that dislodged Daesh fighters from
the last vestiges of their Syrian territory in 2019.
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