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Kurdish delegation head for Damascus for talks: Kurdish Source | world News

A delegation of the semi-late Kurdish administration of the north-east Syrian was led to Damascus to negotiate a March deal to integrate Demadish institutions on Saturday, said a member of the delegation.Under the agreement signed by Syrian interim president Ahmed Al-Shra and Majalaum Abdi, Kurdish-Nedic Syrian democratic forces (SDF) heads, Kurdish are to integrate their citizens and military institutions in the national government. The deal includes all border crossings, oil and gas areas and a regional airport.A member of the Kurdish delegation requested an oblivion to abstract the media, telling the AFP that “a delegation of the autonomous administration is on the way to Damascus to discuss the details of the march deal.Despite the agreement, the Kurds have criticized a constitutional announcement declared by the new authorities, who took power in December after excluding the ruler Bashar al-Assad for a long time, and said that the new government failed to reflect Syria’s diversity.Last month, the Syrian Kurdish parties adopted a joint vision of the “decentralized democratic state”, which was rejected by Damascus, which warned against the efforts of separatism or federalism by the minority group.The march agreement states that the Kurds are “an essential component of the Syrian state”, which guarantees “right to citizenship and all … constitutional rights”.The Kurds of Syria faced margins and repression under the rule of Assad, deprived of their language to speak and celebrated their holidays and, in many cases, in many cases of Syrian nationality.Earlier this month, Syrian Foreign Minister Asad al-Shabani warned that the implementation of the deal will be “prolonged chaos” in the country.In an interview a broadcast by Shams TV located in Arbal in Arbil in Kurdistan region of Northern Iraq, SDF chief Abdi said “We agreed with Damascus and we are currently working on implementing the agreement”.He “emphasizes the need for decentralized Syria, where all its components live with their full rights and do not exclude anyone”.But he accused the new Syrian officials of centralization and “not ready for everyone to live in Syria”.The Kurdish-native armies controlled most of the north-east of Syria, including their oil areas, during the country’s civil war and Islamic State Group Revolt.With the support of the US-led international alliance, the Kurdish-elevated SDF played an important role in the regional defeat of the Jihadi group in Syria in 2019.Abdi said that all Syrians should benefit from Syrian oil money, but said that the Kurdish “wanted an autonomous administration to manage security and political institutions for the people of the area”.

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