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Kurdish Gains In Syria Rattle Turkey

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  • Kurdish Gains In Syria Rattle Turkey

    KURDISH GAINS IN SYRIA RATTLE TURKEY
    by Henry Rigdwell

    http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/library/news/2012/08/mil-120806-voa05.htm?_m=3n%2e002a%2e574%2eey0ao03mpu%2eipk
    August 06, 2012

    CEYLANPINAR, Turkey - Kurds in the north of Syria say they have taken
    control of most of the region's major towns and cities from government
    forces. Turkey fears the twin threats of the Syrian civil conflict
    spilling over the frontier along with a potential escalation of its
    internal war against Kurdish separatists.

    Climbing up to his fourth-floor balcony, Mehmet Bervan, a Kurd from
    Ceylanpinar in southeast Turkey, has a frontline view of the conflict
    playing out in Syria. His house lies close enough to the border fence
    to shout at family members on the other side.

    Bervan hoped this large villa would provide somewhere to live out a
    peaceful retirement. Week by week, he has watched the Syrian uprising
    descend into civil war.

    "Often we would see explosions, bombs going off, smoke rising into
    the air. It was very scary for us here, terrible," he said.

    Bervan echoes the feelings of Kurds across the Middle East.

    "Of course people would like to live together. These fences were not
    here before. We were all one family. Then they put up the fence and
    it separated us all... some families are divided, we have uncles over
    there, brothers over there on the Syrian side," he said.

    The Syrian side of this town, known as Serekanye in Kurdish or Ras
    al-Ayn in Arabic, is now under the full control of Kurdish forces.

    With government forces stretched as they fight the Free Syria Army
    rebels for control of the Syrian heartlands around Aleppo and Damascus,
    the Kurds now control vast swathes of the northeast adjacent to Turkey.

    Turkey's fear is that the Kurds in Syria will give sanctuary to
    Kurdish separatist fighters, known as the PKK.

    In recent days Turkey has launched assaults on PKK strongholds,
    killing at least 11 militants and six soldiers. Tanks and heavy
    weapons also have been deployed along the border in the Kurdish region.

    Prime Minister Recip Tayyip Erdogan has warned Turkey will strike
    PKK fighters in Syria.

    "While the Assad regime commits cruel massacres in Syria, activities
    in northern Syria should be watched carefully," he said. "We can
    never overlook such developments threatening our security."

    While Syrian Kurds have not fully joined the uprising, Kurdish
    political factions recently agreed to unite. Hafiz Abdurahman is a
    Syrian Kurdish human rights activist who fled to Turkey last year. He
    says Turkish fears are misplaced.

    "Kurds are not demanding their own state in Syria, they want a
    free Syria, and for a free Kurdish people to have their own rights
    after being under this totalitarian regime for such a long time,"
    said Abdurahman.

    In Syria, the Kurds are celebrating newfound freedoms. For Turkey,
    the Syrian crisis brings new complexities to a long-standing conflict.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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