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KurdistanObserver.com
Syria Blames ’Criminals’ For Murder Of Kurd
Religious Leader
BEIRUT, June 1 (AFP) A
Kurdish Muslim cleric in Syria who was reported missing last month has died
after being tortured, Kurdish party officials said Wednesday, a charge disputed
by Damascus.
Sheikh Mohammed Maashuq al-Khaznawi had not been heard from since May 10 and was
believed to have been detained by Syrian police.
The cleric "was killed at the hands of Syrian authorities," a spokesman for the
Kurdish Yakiti party said in a statement received by AFP in Beirut.
But an interior ministry official in Damascus, quoted by Syria’s state news
agency SANA, said the sheikh was kidnapped and killed by a criminal gang.
"Five people kidnapped Sheikh Khaznawi in Damascus and took him off to Aleppo
(to the north) where they killed him," the unnamed official said, without giving
a motive. "The gang has been arrested," he said.
An official from the Kurdish Democratic Party in Syria, Nazir Mustapha, told AFP
that the cleric was seen at a military hospital in Damascus with "traces of
torture" on Khaznawi’s body.
The sheikh was widely popular in Syria, and was known for teaching that Islam
and democracy are compatible. He was last seen leaving Damascus’s Islamic
Studies centre, of which he was vice president.
Human rights groups announced the disappearance of the Kurdish cleric, while
Syrian authorities denied holding Khaznawi in custody.
His disappearance led some 10,000 Kurds to demonstrate in his hometown of
Qamishli in northern Syria on May 21, demanding that authorities release news of
the cleric’s whereabouts.
Mustapha said the cleric’s body was expected to arrive later Wednesday in
Qamishli, where he would be buried.
Qamishli was the site of riots in March 2004 that began with stadium fighting
between Arab and Kurdish football fans and grew into bloody clashes between
Kurdish protestors, Syrian security forces and Arab tribesmen.
Kurdish sources reported that 40 died in the fighting. Syrian authorities said
25 were killed.
Hundreds of Kurds were arrested following the disturbances but Syrian President
Bashar al-Assad in March ordered all the prisoners released.
Hassan Saleh, secretary general of the Yakiti party, said earlier this month
that the pardon had not been fully carried out, and alleged that more than 100
Kurds remained in jail.
Saleh also said a number of Kurds were arrested anew by Syrian forces in early
May.
Syria is home to some 1.5 million Kurds, around nine percent of the population.
They are fighting to have their language, culture and political rights
recognised. |
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