Preventing between rival factions in Syria threatens its fragile stability : NPR

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Preventing between Syrian Kurds -who a decade in the past clawed out an autonomous territory within the nation’s northeast- and Turkish-backed militias is posing a severe menace to the present stability.



ARI SHAPIRO, HOST:

It has been greater than a month since insurgent forces drove Syria’s regime from energy, however in a menace to the nation’s fragile stability, combating between rival factions continues in components of the nation. The fiercest combating is going down in Syria’s north, the place each the U.S. and Turkey are concerned. NPR’s Jane Arraf traveled near the entrance line and brings us this story.

(SOUNDBITE OF TANKS RUMBLING)

JANE ARRAF, BYLINE: We’re standing on a rustic highway alongside the Euphrates River within the north of Syria. Turkish tanks journey a close-by freeway. However this highway is alongside the riverside, with tall, skinny timber main right down to mist rising over deep blue water. A militia commander stops.

ABU SULEIMAN: (Non-English language spoken).

ARRAF: He calls us over. Lower than 20 miles from the border with Turkey, he assumes we’re Turkish, and he tells us in damaged Arabic it is harmful up forward. Only a mile away is a bridge that’s now the entrance line.

SULEIMAN: (Talking Arabic).

ARRAF: “Enemies on the bridge,” he tells us. “Drones, terrorist militias, land mines.”

The commander, who goes by his battle identify, Abu Suleiman (ph), is from an Arab Turkish-backed group. The terrorists he is referring to is a Turkish Kurdish faction that has been combating Turkey for many years. These fighters are entwined with the principle U.S. ally – the Syrian Kurdish forces.

SULEIMAN: (Talking Arabic).

ARRAF: The fighters collect round us as we speak. The U.S. has mediated a truce between the factions, however right here, close to a strategic dam, it is not holding. Whereas Abu Suleiman says he appreciates the U.S. function, it is Turkey safeguarding their pursuits.

SULEIMAN: (Talking Arabic).

ARRAF: “America is a good friend, however Turkey is a brother,” he says.

HASSAN: (Non-English language spoken).

ARRAF: A fighter from one other Turkish-backed militia tells us to maneuver off the highway into the shelter of the timber. He is apprehensive about assault drones. He asks, for safety causes, to be recognized solely by his first identify, Hassan (ph).

HASSAN: (Non-English language spoken).

ARRAF: “Now, in the event that they give up their weapons and are available below the management of the state, we welcome them,” he says of the Kurdish forces. He agrees with Syria’s transitional authorities – that each one factions want to come back below central command.

HASSAN: (Non-English language spoken).

ARRAF: “That is it – one chief, one military, one state. But when the scenario is like this and everybody needs to take over an space, it will not work,” he says.

It is not simply the countryside the place issues are tense.

(SOUNDBITE OF CAR HORNS HONKING)

ARRAF: Twenty miles west of the Euphrates, town of Manbij is below new management. It was a part of the Kurdish area till Turkish-backed forces drove out the Kurds in December.

(SOUNDBITE OF MOTORCYCLE ENGINE REVVING)

ARRAF: In all places is the sound of bikes, a lot of them ridden by armed fighters with head scarves and lengthy, flowing hair widespread with Islamist militias. Most civilians do not wish to speak.

UNIDENTIFIED PERSON: (Non-English language spoken).

ARRAF: “Go discover another person,” one man says. However privately, we hear that nobody is bound who these fighters are, that folks do not exit at night time as a result of they’re afraid. In a single store, a pc technician, Izzadeen Mustafa (ph), says individuals are ready for the brand new Syrian authorities to deliver order.

Do individuals assume it is secure now?

IZZADEEN MUSTAFA: I feel not an excessive amount of as a result of, as you understand, we nonetheless – we do not have, like, a authorities or something organized. So we want a time, I feel.

ARRAF: He says everybody needs peace, however with so many nations and factions concerned, he says nobody feels it is inside their management. Jane Arraf, NPR Information, Manbij, Syria.

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