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KurdistanObserver.com
A Murder Stirs Kurds in
Syria
June 15, 2005
By Nicholas Blanford,
The
Christian Science Monitor
QAMISHLI, (Western Kurdistan) — At a meeting of Syrian political-intelligence
officers in late April in the Kurdish northeast, the only item on the agenda
was Sheikh Mohammed Mashouq al-Khaznawi.
He was becoming a problem for Syria, says a Western
diplomat familiar with the meeting.
A moderate Islamic cleric who once worked with the Syrian
government to temper extremism, Sheikh Khaznawi was emerging as one of its most
outspoken critics. He advocated Kurdish rights and democracy, galvanizing many
of the 1.7 million Kurds against the regime of President Bashar al-Assad. At the
same time, Kurds were gaining political power in Iraq, Lebanon was casting
Syrian troops out, and the U.S. was criticizing Syria's government.
"[Syrian intelligence] wrote a report saying he ...
should be stopped. They said he would start a revolution," says Sheikh Murad
Khaznawi, the eldest of Sheikh Mohammed's eight sons.
On May 10, the cleric disappeared in Damascus. Three
weeks later, he was found dead.
His murder sent shock waves through Syria's marginalized
Kurdish community, sparking mass demonstrations earlier this month and
mobilizing a community that represents the most potent domestic threat to
President Assad.
"The sheikh was a symbol for the Kurdish people and he
wanted all the people to unite and struggle peacefully," says Hassan Saleh,
secretary-general of Yakiti Party, a banned Kurdish group.
The Syrian authorities deny involvement in Khaznawi's
killing. But analysts and diplomats note that the cleric's death coincides with
a crackdown by Damascus against internal political dissent.
"The stability of Syria is in the hands of the Kurds,"
says Ibrahim Hamidi, correspondent of the Arabic Al Hayat daily. "They have a
unique position. They are organized, they have an Islamic identity, regional
support through the Kurds in Turkey, Iraq and Iran, international support with
some European countries lobbying for them, and political status because of [the
Kurdish empowerment in] Iraq."
Syria's 1.7 million Kurds comprise the largest non-Arab
group in Syria, making up about 9% of the population. Most Kurds live in the
Hasake province. The area's economic importance and the Baath Party's Arab
nationalist ideology have ensured that the province has long been under firm
state control.
In 1962, a year before the Baath Party took power, a
census stripped around 120,000 Kurdish Syrians of their citizenship,
reclassifying them as "foreigners," who carry red identity cards rather than
passports. Today, some 300,000 Kurds live here.
In the early 1970s, thousands of Arabs were resettled on
confiscated Kurdish property along a 200-mile strip on the Turkish border as
part of an Arabization policy that included banning Kurds from schools.
Preaching individual rights
It was in this milieu that Sheikh Khaznawi was raised. He
was born into a respected religious family that followed the Sufi branch of
Islam, a movement of organized brotherhoods, known as Tariqas, each one headed
by a sheikh. But the young Khaznawi broke with Sufi tradition and began
preaching individual freedom and self-responsibility rather than collective
obedience to a single leader.
"The sheikh used to speak against the majority of Sufi
ways. He said it was like drugging the mind," says his son Murad.
A father of 16 children, he cut a distinguished figure in
his traditional garb of gray tunic and tightly wrapped white turban. He
possessed a good sense of humor and, unlike most Islamic clerics, was happy to
shake hands with women. Khaznawi's moderate ideas, which included support for
secularism and tolerance of other faiths, won him a growing number of followers
and endeared him initially to the Syrian government, which views Islamic
extremism with hostility.
In March 2004, simmering tensions in the Kurdish
northeast exploded into bloody clashes between Kurds, Syrian security forces,
and Arab tribesmen. The government asked Khaznawi to travel to Qamishli to help
ease tensions. His mediation helped calm the situation, but he grew increasingly
active in advocating Kurdish rights. When 312 Kurdish detainees were released in
March, Khaznawi was there to greet them. In April, on the anniversary of the
death of a Kurd in last year's riots, he publicly denounced the government's
treatment of Kurds.
"After that he was warned by the security [agents] that
what he was doing was dangerous," says Mr. Saleh. Then, Khaznawi traveled to
Brussels in February and met with the exiled head of the Muslim Brotherhood, an
Islamist organization which fought a terrorist campaign against the government
in the early 1980s. The meeting earned him another warning from state security.
In April, he gave an interview with the Canadian Globe
and Mail newspaper in which he was quoted as saying, "Either the regime will
change or the regime must go.... The reason I can speak out is because the
Americans are trying get rid of dictators and help the oppressed."
Khaznawi began receiving death threats from Islamic
extremists who abhorred his moderation and his criticism of suicide bombings in
Iraq. Also threatened was his colleague Mohammed Habash, director of the Islamic
Studies Center in Damascus, an institution that advocates moderate Islam.
"They warned me and Khaznawi that we were playing with
fire," says Mr. Habash. "I'm afraid. I think there's a clear plan of the
fundamentalists to fight the renewal [moderation] of Islam."
Early last month, Khaznawi received a call from people
claiming to be followers of his father, who died in 1992. They told the cleric
that their father was ill and wanted to see him. Could he come to their house
for breakfast? He was suspicious, but he accepted. He left the Islamic Studies
Center on the morning of May 10 and was not seen again. "He said he would go to
breakfast, but unfortunately he went to his death instead," Habash says.
Kurds rising
Khaznawi's disappearance spurred some 10,000 Kurds to
demonstrate in Qamishli on May 21, calling on the government to reveal his
whereabouts. But the government denied any knowledge of the kidnapping.
On June 1, Khaznawi's family was informed that their
father had been found dead in Deir ez-Zor. His body, which was buried in a
cemetery on the edge of town, showed signs of torture. "The security told us he
had been buried for 12 days," says Sheikh Morshed Khaznawi, another of
Khaznawi's sons. "We didn't believe them because the depth of the grave was only
70 centimeters [two feet] and Deir ez-Zor is very hot. He should have decayed
very badly."
The Syrian authorities blamed the cleric's murder on a
"criminal gang." Two gang members were arrested and were shown confessing on
television.
Tens of thousands of mourners attended Khaznawi's burial
and some 10,000 (mostly Kurd) protesters took to the streets of Qamishli on June
5. The demonstration turned violent when police and Arab tribesmen beat the
protesters, including women, then looted dozens of Kurdish-owned shops.
"We have exceeded the culture of fear that the regime
planted in us," says Machal Tammo, of the Tayyar Mustaqbal, a Kurdish Party.
"For this very reason, the regime does not want us to ask for our demands
peacefully."
More rights for Kurds?
The main road between Hasake and Qamishli cuts across a
barren terrain of harvested wheat fields, the monotony of the featureless plain
occasionally broken by small man-made hills, known as tells, which have been
part of this ancient steppe for more than 4,000 years. The hot wind creates
spinning columns of dust which pirouette and sway gracefully across the fields
of golden stubble.
At the entrance to Qamishli today, plainclothes Syrian
intelligence officers with rifles keep an eye on passing traffic. More
intelligence officers sit on stools beside their vehicle at a roundabout.
Security has grown tighter since Khaznawi's kidnapping and murder.
Morshed Khaznawi, who bears a striking resemblance to his
slain father, demands an international investigation into his father's death.
"We think the Syrian authorities have complete and total responsibility," he
says.
But Mr. Habash and some analysts doubt that the regime
was behind Khaznawi's death, pointing to a long-running family dispute and the
enmity he aroused among Islamic extremists.
"I believe the children of Mashouq are in the eye of the
storm and have a desire to accuse the government," Habash says. "Mashouq had
good contacts with the regime, government, army, and intelligence. His political
activities were not enough to get him killed."
Following the March 2004 riots in Qamishli, Abdullah
Derdary, the Syrian planning minister, traveled to Hasake province and reassured
the Kurds that economic assistance was on its way.
"Nothing happened and this time no one believes them,"
says a Western diplomat familiar with Kurdish affairs. "They are looking at Iraq
and thinking we can organize ourselves and the regime knows it."
During the 1990s, Syrian Kurds were permitted to fulfill
their military service with the PKK, the Kurdish armed separatist group that was
fighting for autonomy in southeast Turkey. Damascus and Ankara signed a security
pact in 1998 which ended Syria's support for the PKK. But, according to the
diplomat, many Syrian Kurds have slipped into northern Iraq to continue fighting
with a newly resurgent PKK, which could have alarming implications for Damascus.
Still, there are indications that the government is
taking the Kurdish dilemma more seriously. The government recently appointed
Major General Mohammed Mansoura as head of Syria's powerful political security
department. General Mansoura has extensive experience with the Kurds having
headed the Hasake branch of military intelligence from 1982 to 2002.
Regardless of who killed Khaznawi, the death of the
respected cleric has refocused attention on Syria's Kurds. Last week's Baath
Party Congress referred to unspecified steps to help the Kurds — widely reported
to involve granting citizenship to the 300,000 stateless Kurds.
But for many Kurds such government measures are too
little too late. "The Kurds are really fed up. They don't care anymore," says
Maan Abdelsalam, a Syrian civil rights activist.
The Kurds' Status in Syria
* Population: 1.7 million. As Syria's largest non-Arab
group, Kurds account for approximately 9% of the country's total population.
* Stateless Kurds: In 1962, more than 120,000 Kurds were
stripped of their Syrian citizenship. Today the number of Kurds without Syrian
passports has swelled to more than 300,000.
* Hasake Province, where most Kurds live, is the main
source of Syria's oil and gas reserves and a major center of cotton and wheat
production.
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