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Erdogan Says Syrian Kurdish Demand for Autonomy Is ‘Nothing More Than a Dream’

Turkish President Recept Tayyip Erdogan on Wednesday sidelined the Syrian Kurdish demands for partial autonomy under the Syrian government, saying it was “just a dream.” The military junta that now controls Damascus was not even accepted by the Kurdish ambitions for independence.

“The problems with the federal structure are nothing more than a life dream. There is no place in Syria's reality,” Erdogan said. I sneered A and while I returned to Ankara, I reached the reporter Summit With the Italian government in Rome.

Erdogan advised the Kurds to “take measures that will help regional stability, rather than dreaming of the federal structure or making decisions that threaten the region.”

“We will not allow for coercive structures across borders other than unified Syria,” he declared.

The Turkish president was in response to a meeting between Kurdish political groups in Syria, Iraq and Turkish on Saturday. The conference created a joint declaration calling for “a fair solution as a decentralized democratic state, merely a solution to the Kurdish problem in Syria.”

The Kurds said such arrangements would contribute to “building a new Syria that caters to all people, separated from unilateral domination in thought and practice and without eliminating or alienating its components.”

“The inability to resolve the Kurdish problem in Syria leads to instability, and rights, democracy and justice are meaningless in Syria's future. Rather, oppression and tyranny will become a critical feature of its future.”

What the Kurds were saying is essentially that they didn't want to be ruled by the Jihadian government that seized power in Damascus Overthrow Dictator Bashar al-Assad in December.

Ahmed Al-Shara, perhaps the temporary government head, is a former al-Qaeda officer and his ordered extremist group Hayat Taharil al-Sham (HTS), began as a franchise for Syrian al-Qaeda.

Sharaa argues that he and his organization want to turn the new leaves over and govern Syria in a responsible and comprehensive way. The Kurdish Conference on Saturday cited Shara's own promise to establish a “comprehensive transitional government that reflects Syria's diversity” in a call for autonomy in the Northeast Territories.

Shara It was rejected That request denounces the concept of decentralized government on Sunday as a threat to national unity.

“We explicitly reject any attempts to impose partitions or create separatist cantons under conditions of federalism or self-liberty without national consensus. The unity of Syrian territory and its people is a red line,” Sharaah's office said.

The Damascus government reminded the Kurdish-led, US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) that they reminded them signature transaction In March, he placed all his troops under the command of the central government, uniting them with national bureaucrats, and helped them conquer the last remains of Syrian pro-Assad forces.

Sharaa wants a unified power, but Erdogan sees all Kurds as a threat to Turkey's national security with guns. Turkey is nothing but the wing of the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), the Turkish violent Kurdish separatist organization. The Erdogan government has made several invasions into Syria and has formed alliances with suspicious Islamic forces during the Syrian rebellion to drive the Kurds out of the Turkish border.

Turkey has it It has been declared Strong support for Sharaa's government. Some of that enthusiastic support assumes Sharaa, which puts YPG, SDF and other Kurdish armed groups under control, making the turkey feel safer.

The Kurds, like many Western leaders, see Sharaah's promise of unity and tolerance with doubt, and the SDF has expressed reluctance to break down the independent command structure, even if they agree to support the Damascus government.

SDF continues to fight skirmish Syrian Turkish militia allies attack Kurdish positions in northeastern Syria, even after the PKK declared a ceasefire with Turkey at the beginning of March.

Kurds and members of other Syrian minority groups; I said New York Times (NYT) On Tuesday, they still don't trust the government in Damascus. Especially since it became very friendly with Türkiye.

“Alshara and the new government want to control everything in Syria, and of course they dream of controlling all of our regions. But that's very difficult,” Kurdish politician Badran Kurdi said. NYT.

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