Aljazeera.com  
Make Aljazeera.com my Homepage
Home Page
World News
Middle East News
Conspiracy Theories
Who's Telling the Truth
What you should know
Poll of the week
News Alerts
Email

Login@Aljazeera.com

Email Address:

Password:
 
FREE Email Sign up
Password Reset
Email this article

Fires Burning After Kurd Riots in Syria
AP - 3/19/2004 3:20:00 PM GMT

Signs of the Kurdish-Arab riots in three northern Syria towns that killed 25 people eight days ago were still present as fires still burned in Qamishli on Friday.

Faisal Youssef, an executive of the Progressive Kurdish Party, said the city, 450 miles northeast of Damascus, was returning to normal, but local Kurdish groups have canceled their celebrations to mark Nowruz, the Kurdish New Year, which falls on Sunday.

The festivities, which usually feature bonfires and folk dancing, will not take place "to prevent infiltrators from undermining historic relations between Kurds and Arabs," Youssef said Thursday by telephone.

Kurds in Syria, Iran, Turkey and Lebanon and Iranians mark Nowruz on March 21 every year. The feast, which symbolizes purification of the soul, dates back to the pre-Islamic religion of Zoroastrianism.

Clouds of smoke that could be seen in neighboring Turkey rose from barns of fodder set alight last weekend during the riots, Youssef said.

The violence began March 12 with a brawl between supporters of two teams in a soccer stadium in Qamishli. One team had many Kurdish players, the other had Arab players. The fighting continued the next day when Kurds went on the rampage during a funeral for the riot victims, and it spread to Hasakah, 50 miles southwest of Qamishli.

On Tuesday, Kurds battled Arab policemen in Syria's second-biggest city, Aleppo, 200 miles north of Damascus, and the nearby town of Afreen.

The government has blamed the violence on what it calls "mobs and opportunists" that have been influenced from abroad.

In the government's first report on casualties, Syrian Interior Minister Ali Hammoud said Thursday that 25 people were killed in the violence.

Speaking at a news conference in Damascus, Hammoud said there were attempts to "sow sedition" and that authorities had to take "decisive" measures after efforts to end the trouble peacefully failed.

The United States has criticized the Syrian government's handling of the riots. "Citizens of Kurdish descent have been protesting the lack of equal rights and, in the ensuing violence, the authorities have not only killed and injured demonstrators, but also clamped down hard on normal life in cities where there's a Kurdish majority," U.S. State Department spokesman Adam Ereli said.

It is thought that the Kurds, whom the Syrian constitution does not recognize, may have been inspired by the political rise of Kurds in neighboring Iraq since the overthrow of Saddam Hussein last year.


Kurds comprise about 1.5 million of Syria's 18.5 million people and live mostly in the underdeveloped provinces of Qamishli and Hasakah.


A Syrian rights group, the Committees for the Defense of Democratic Liberties and Human Rights, called on the government Thursday to release all political prisoners, "particularly those who were detained recently" in the Kurdish rioting.


An estimated 250 Kurds have been detained since the violence began.

 

SEARCH NEWS: Exact
WORLD NEWS
Blair, Ahern Call for N.Irish Progress by June
Russian Navy Warns "Nuclear Ship Could Explode"
Taiwan Election Recount After Law Proposal
China halts rights talks with US
'Al-Qaeda hideout' tunnels found
Poland Detains two Pakistanis and an Ukrainian
Spain Arrests Four More Bomb Suspects
Why Murder Sheikh Yassin Now? - The Pullout from Gaza, A Face saver for the Israeli's
MIDDLE EAST
Israel Army Kills 2 Palestinian Fighters
U.N.: Yassin Killing Will Lead to Violence
U.S. Convoy in Iraq Attacked, Three Dead
Syria Brushes Aside U.S. Sanctions Threat
Rocket Hits Baghdad's Sheraton Hotel
Yassin Urged Arabs to Resist Israel, U.S.
Israeli Army Killed Two In Lebanon
Israel Says All Hamas Leaders Marked for Death
Aljazeera.com  
Make Aljazeera.com my Homepage
   About Us  •  Contact  •  Privacy Policy  •  Terms of Use
   Copyright 2004 AlJazeera Publishing Limited