SYRIA: Kurds detained after protest on anniversary of clash
IRIN news 08.04.06
UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs 08.04.06
DAMASCUS, 15 Mar 2006 (IRIN) - Security forces detained human rights
activists and a former opposition MP following demonstrations on 14
March marking the anniversary of deadly clashes between Kurds and Syrian
security officials in 2004, according to protest participants.
On the same day, Human Rights Watch demanded the immediate release of
Ammar Qurabi, a spokesman for the Arab Organisation for Human Rights in
Syria. Qurabi was detained by security forces two days earlier as he
returned from a trip to Washington and Paris, where he attended
conferences on democratic reform and human rights.
Security forces also detained former MP and opposition activist Riad
Seif, along with at least five members of the Kurdish Democratic
Progressive Party. The arrests came after Kurdish and Arab demonstrators
held a sit-in outside Damascus' Cabinet office to commemorate the 2004
clashes in the northern city of Qamishli that left 30 dead.
"Three of the activists wanted to send a message to the Prime Minister
on Kurdish demands, such as compensations for the damage following the
2004 clash," said human rights lawyer Anwar al-Bunni, adding that
several demonstrators had been injured in the melee. "Riot police
arrested Seif and five other Kurdish activists." While Seif was later
released, the five Kurdish activists remain in detention, according to
local human rights lawyers.
On the same day, security forces also quelled a demonstration by over
500 Kurdish students outside Damascus University. Demonstrators carried
red roses and posters of those killed two years ago in the three-day
riot, which had followed a football match between rival Arab and Kurdish
teams.
In Qamishli, the site of the clash and home to a large number of Syria's
1.5 million Kurds, some 15,000 people gathered at the graveyard of the
slain. Attendees included representatives of the Kurdish Yakiti and
Azadi parties, both of which have been outlawed by Damascus.
"The security forces patrolled around the graveyard, but didn't
interfere with or hinder the rally," said Kurdish Future Party
Secretary-General Misha'al Timo, speaking from Qamishli. "The Kurdish
people took the decision to hold the rally whatever the consequences."
The arrests in Damascus came as a number of opposition figures were
prevented from travelling to the US to attend a 13 March conference
organised by the Kurdish Front for Promoting Democracy & Freedom in
Syria. The Washington-based group seeks to improve the legal status and
human-rights conditions of Syrian Kurds.
"A number of people we invited weren't allowed to come," said conference
president Sherkoh Abbas. "Some had their passports taken away and some
were even imprisoned." According to Abbas, "seven or eight" Syrian
Kurdish parties accepted the invitation to attend the conference.
After a 1962 census stripped many Kurdish families of their Syrian
nationality, an estimated 300,000 now remain without citizenship. As a
result, many Syrian Kurds have limited access to education, property
ownership, political participation and even legal marriage.
"Syria is denying its Kurdish population numerous fundamental human
rights by refusing to address these issues of nationality," US-based
Refugees International noted in a recent statement. "Although President
Bashar al-Assad has said he wants to resolve the problem, few actions
have been taken to reinstate nationality for the Kurdish people."
In a 10 November speech, al-Assad announced that the government would
soon address the issue in "an expression of the importance of Syrian
national unity". Nevertheless, until now, there has been no change to
the Kurds' stateless status.
Although there are over a dozen Kurdish opposition parties operating in
Syria, they have largely failed to unite effectively. "People have to
understand that Kurds aren't a separatist group, but are very willing to
work with other Syrian organisations to bring democracy," said Abbas.
"Our goal is also to create a committee to speak with one, united voice
on Kurdish issues in Syria."
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