A part of the committee said a committee from east Syria’s semi-autonomous Kurdish administration was traveling to Damascus on Saturday to discuss how to implement a March agreement to incorporate Kurdish institutions. The Kurds are to integrate their civil and military institutions into the national government under the terms of the agreement signed by Syria’s interim president Ahmed al-Sharaa and Mazloum Abdi, the head of the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces ( SDF). A local airports, oil and gas fields, and all border bridges are included in the agreement. A part of the Kurdish group informed AFP that” a group from the intelligent administration is on the way to Damascus to explore” details of the March package, a member of the delegation who asked for anonymity to speak to reporters. The new government, which took over after ousting longstanding king Bashar al-Assad in December, has been criticized by the Kurds for not embracing the diversity of Syria. Syrian Kurdish events adopted a “decentralized political state” last month, a move that Damascus opposed, which warned against minority groups ‘ tries to secede or form a federal government. The Kurds have “essential ties to the Arab state,” according to the March agreement, and they have the right to citizenship and other legal rights. Under Assad’s principle, Syria’s Kurds were subject to marginalization and repression, being denied the right to enjoy their holidays, use of their language, and, in many cases, of Arab nationality. Asaad al-Shaibani, the foreign minister of Syria, warned earlier this month that putting off the execution of the bargain may “prolong the chaos” in the nation. SDF main Abdi stated in an interview that was broadcast on Friday by Shams Television and that” we are committed to what was agreed with Damascus and we are now working on implementing this deal.” He emphasized the need for a “decentralized Syria where all its constituents reside with their complete freedom and no one is denied.” However, he claimed that Syria’s new officials were” not available for everyone to live in Syria” and that they wanted centralization. During the government’s legal war and the Islamic State group rebellion, Kurdish-led forces seized control of a large portion of Syria’s east, including its oil fields. The Kurdish-led SDF, which had the backing of an international coalition led by the US, played a significant role in the ideology team’s regional annihilation in Syria in 2019. Abdi claimed that all Syrians may profit from Syria’s oil riches, but that Kurds wanted” an intelligent administration to govern directly and for the people of the area to handle security and social institutions.”
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