Tell Abyad

Tell Abyad
تل أبيض
Town and nahiyah
Tell Abyad

Location in Syria

Coordinates: 36°41′51″N 38°57′24″E / 36.6975°N 38.9567°E / 36.6975; 38.9567Coordinates: 36°41′51″N 38°57′24″E / 36.6975°N 38.9567°E / 36.6975; 38.9567
Country  Syria
Governorate Al-Raqqah
District Tell Abyad
Elevation 350 m (1,150 ft)
Population (2004 census)[1]
  Town 14,825
  Nahiyah 44,671
Time zone EET (UTC+2)
  Summer (DST) EEST (UTC+3)
P-Code C5792
Geocode SY110200

Tell Abyad (Arabic: تل أبيض, Kurdish: Girê Spî) is a town and nahiya in Syria. It is the administrative center of the Tell Abyad District within the Ar-Raqqah Governorate. Located along the Balikh River, it constitutes a divided city with the bordering city of Akçakale in Turkey.

Before the Syrian Civil War, Tell Abyad had a population of 52,490. The majority of the inhabitants are Arabs,[2] with a Kurdish[3] and Armenian minority. [4] [5] According to Kurdish human rights group KurdWatch, Tell Abyad is predominantly Arab, and the areas around the city are only 10% Kurdish. .[6] According to the governor of the Turkish province of Şanlıurfa Arabs and Turkmen constitute 98% of the population in the Tell Abyad area.[7] However, a Turkish columnist told the news agency Al-Monitor that Kurds constitute 45% of the population.[3]

On 16 June 2015, the town was captured by the Kurdish People's Protection Units (YPG) in the course of their Tell Abyad offensive, and since then has remained under their control.[8] As a preliminary result of the ongoing Syrian Civil War, Tell Abyad today is situated within the autonomous Federation of Northern Syria – Rojava.

History

In antiquity, Tell Abyad and the surrounding region was ruled by the Assyrian Empire and settled by Arameans. Tell Abyad could have been the site of the neo-Assyrian–era Aramean inhabited settlement of Baliḫu, mentioned in 814 BC.[9] Later, various other empires ruled the area, such as the Romans, Byzantines, Sassanids, Umayyads, Abbasids and finally the Ottoman Empire. Tell Abyad remained Ottoman till the end of World War I, when it was incorporated in the French mandate of Syria.

The modern town was founded by Armenian refugees from Turkey and survivors of the deportations conducted during the Armenian Genocide, with around 250 Armenian families living in the city prior to the civil war.[10]

Syrian Civil War

According to a Turkish columnist told the news agency Al-Monitor, 30-45% of Tell Abyad's population Kurdish, and from July 19, 2013 to Aug. 5, 2013 Kurds were driven out of Tell Abyad by Turkish supported factions.[10]

On June 30, 2014, Tell Abyad was captured by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), who raised their flag at the border crossing with Turkey.[11] After ISIL defeated the Kurdish forces, the YPG and Jabhat Al-Akrad, ISIL fighters announced from the minarets of the local mosques that all Kurds had to leave Tel Abyad or else be killed. Thousands of civilians, including some Turkmen and Arab families, fled on 21 July.[12][13] ISIL fighters systematically looted and destroyed the property of Kurds, and in some cases, resettled displaced Arab Sunni families from the Qalamoun area (Rif Damascus), Dayr Az-Zawr and Ar-Raqqah in abandoned Kurdish homes.[13]

In June 2015, the town was besieged by the YPG and its allies.[14] On June 15, 2015, the city was retaken by Kurdish YPG and the Free Syrian Army forces. Members of the Democratic Union Party accused the Turkish military of opening fire at its forces after the majority of the town was included into a Kurdish enclave. The Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu confirmed it and he said that Turkey had warned the PYD not to cross to the "west of the Euphrates and that we would hit it the moment it did. "We hit it twice".[15]

On February 27, 2016, Tell Abyad came under attack from ISIL militants. The YPG and Kurdish security forces reportedly repelled and eliminated all of the ISIL attackers but lost at least 20 of their members in the fighting. A YPG spokesman claimed that some of the ISIL attackers had crossed from Turkey to attack the town. Turkey quickly denied this claim. According to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, there was not any infiltration from Turkish borders as Russians and Kurds claim, but there were a large number of dormant IS sleeper cells under the age of 18 who entered the town one month before the operation, and many others entered the town on the eve of the offensive dressed in Kurdish Self-Defense uniforms.[16]

Ethnic cleansing

After the capture of Tel Abyad district, some groups and authorities have accused Kurdish YPG fighters of deliberately displacing thousands of Arabs and Turkmens from the areas they captured from ISIL forces in northern Syria, including Tel Abyad district[17][18] — a charge strongly denied by the Kurds.[19] The accusation was not backed by any evidence of ethnic or sectarian killings.[19] The head of Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the people who had fled into Turkey were escaping fighting and there was no systematic effort to force people out.[20] A report published by a Kurdish human rights group confirmed the accusations against PYD.[21]

Governance

After Tell Abyad was captured it was administered by the YPG as part of the Kobani Canton, despite being a predominantly Arab area. However on 21 October 2015, a council including representatives of local Arab, Kurdish, Turkmen and Armenian communities declared Tell Abyad part of the de-facto autonomous region of Rojava. While remaining under Kobanê Canton's administration, the town will be granted self-governance.[22]

References

  1. "General Census of Population and Housing 2004: Tell Abyad nahiyah" (in Arabic). Syrian Central Bureau of Statistics. Retrieved 15 October 2015. Also available in English: "Syria: 2004 census data". UN OCHA. Retrieved 15 October 2015.
  2. "Arab Tribes Split Between Kurds And Jihadists". Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. 2015. Retrieved 26 June 2015.
  3. 1 2 "Kurds eye new corridor to Mediterranean". Al-Monitor.
  4. http://panarmenian.net/m/eng/news/194632
  5. armenianweekly.com/2015/12/09/surviving-aleppo/
  6. "New Report: Ethnic Cleansing in Tall Abyad? Characteristics of YPG and PYD rule in the areas captured from the IS". KurdWatch.
  7. "US Expresses Concerns About PYD Human Rights". BasNews. Retrieved 26 June 2015.
  8. Master. "YPG and rebels take full control on Tal Abiad city". Syrian Observatory For Human Rights. Retrieved June 30, 2015.
  9. Edward Lipiński (2000). The Aramaeans: Their Ancient History, Culture, Religion. Peeters Publishers. pp. 122–. ISBN 978-90-429-0859-8.
  10. 1 2 Taştekin, Fehim (October 29, 2015). "Is Turkey setting a Kurdish trap?". Al-Monitor.
  11. Tulin Daloglu (2014-06-30). "ISIS [sic] raises flag at Turkish border". Al-Monitor. Retrieved 2015-09-10.
  12. "Selected testimonies from victims of the Syrian conflict: Twenty-seventh session" (PDF). UN Human Rights Council.
  13. 1 2 "Report of the Independent International Commission of Inquiry on the Syrian Arab Republic: Twenty-seventh session". UN Human Rights Council.
  14. Lefteris Pitarakis And Bassem Mrque (June 14, 2014). "Thousands of Syrians flee into Turkey amid intense fighting". AP The Big Story. Associated Press. Retrieved June 15, 2015.
  15. "Turkey attacks Kurdish fighters inside Syria". aljazeera.
  16. "By Califate Cubs and Self-Defense Uniforms, IS make a Big Opperation". syriahr. Retrieved February 28, 2016.
  17. "Kurds accused of "ethnic cleansing" by Syria rebels". cbsnews. Retrieved June 22, 2015.
  18. "Syrian rebels accuse Kurdish forces of 'ethnic cleansing' of Sunni Arabs". The Telegraph. Retrieved June 22, 2015.
  19. 1 2 "Kurdish Fighters Seize Large Parts of IS Border Stronghold". The New York Times.
  20. "Syrian Kurds battle Islamic State for town at Turkish border". Reuters.
  21. "New Report: Ethnic Cleansing in Tall Abyad? Characteristics of YPG and PYD rule in the areas captured from the IS". KurdWatch.
  22. Tom Perry (21 October 2015). "Town joins Kurdish-led order in Syria, widening sway at Turkish border". Reuters. Retrieved 21 October 2015.

External link

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