2013-05-30 15:24:35
Φωτογραφία για Syria: Border Clashes Pit FSA Against Kurds
Female members of the Kurdistan Workers' Party are pictured in the northern Iraqi city of Dohuk on 13 May 2013, as the group was preparing for the return of their comrades stationed in Turkey. (Photo: AFP - Safin Hamed)

By: Youssef Sheikho

Tension returns to the already unstable relationship between the Free Syrian Army (FSA) and the Kurdish Popular Protection Units in the countryside of Aleppo, following attempts by the FSA to raid Kurdish-controlled villages in the Afrin region.

The clashes in the Afrin region – between units of the Muslim Brotherhood's Tawhid Brigade and Islamist and Kurdish groups supported by Ankara – resulted in the displacement of some villagers and the closure of the Afrin-Aleppo road.

Kurdish sources confirmed to Al-Akhbar that 14 members of the opposition units and two Kurdish fighters were killed over the weekend. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the clashes caused the death of 11 rebel fighters and the injury of more than 20.


Reports on injuries and the clashes’ cause conflicted. In a statement, the Popular Protection Units (YPG) announced the deaths of 11 members of armed groups, including a battalion commander, and the injuring of 15 other fighters.

On the other hand, the Tawhid Brigade said that the "commander of Battalion 21" was killed, as well as the commander of the Sayyid al-Shuhada al-Hamza, AKA Shamel. Dissident Kurdish captain Bioar Mustafa, commander of the Salaheddin Battalion fighting alongside the FSA against the YPG, was also injured.

The Tawhid Battalion accused one of the Kurdish checkpoints of "facilitating the passage of residents of Kfar Nebel," which the FSA has put under siege.

The YPG, however, said in a statement that "FSA groups attacked the village of Aqiba in Nahiet Shirawa and the YPG responded to the attack."

In this respect, a Kurdish source explained to Al-Akhbar that the ideology of the Muslim Brotherhood "is a bigger threat to the Kurds from the entire Baathist doctrine.FSA units kidnapped two Kurdish citizens from the village of Bassila on the Aleppo-Afrin road. The Syrian army exploited the clashes between the two opposition groups. A source close to the FSA was reported saying that the regime's forces sent military and logistical reinforcements to the besieged Ming Military Airport. In the meantime, the Sheikh Said Piran battalions fighting alongside the FSA at the Ming Airport and some neighborhoods of Aleppo announced its "complete withdrawal from Aleppo and the beginning of a march to Afrin to defend it against the FSA."

The Kurdish Front Brigade, which is close to the YPG despite fighting against the Syrian army alongside the FSA, announced that they are coordinating all their operations with the YPG. "They are with us in the same trench," it said.

The YPG, however, maintained that the FSA's attack "targets the entire Afrin region and was planned in advance." Kurdish sources maintained that there is a plan by the FSA in the Aleppo countryside to attack the villages of Afrin and impose an economic siege.

However, this is not the first attempt by FSA groups in Aleppo to attack villages under the control of the Kurdish units. In this respect, a Kurdish source explained to Al-Akhbar that the ideology of the Muslim Brotherhood "is a bigger threat to the Kurds from the entire Baathist doctrine."

"But anytime the Brotherhood thinks about cleansing Aleppo or its countryside, they will find that the Kurds will be their biggest challenge," he added.

"Despite the Brotherhood knowing that they are fighting a losing battle in Afrin, which will weaken and drain them, they seem to be pulled ideologically," he said. "This cancels the pragmatic side."

This article is an edited translation from the Arabic Edition.

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