Syria Kurds say lawmaker selection process undemocratic

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Young Kurdish men line up to sign up to join Syrian government's General Security forces at a police station in Afrin, Syria, an area in the country's north from which Kurds were forcibly displaced years ago, Thursday Aug. 21, 2025. (AP)
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Syria’s Kurds on Sunday criticized the upcoming selection of members of a new transitional parliament as undemocratic, after authorities postponed the process for Kurdish-controlled areas in the north. (AP)
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Updated 24 August 2025
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Syria Kurds say lawmaker selection process undemocratic

  • Syria’s Kurds on Sunday criticized the upcoming selection of members of a new transitional parliament as undemocratic, after authorities postponed the process for Kurdish-controlled areas in the north

QAMISHLI: Syria’s Kurds on Sunday criticized the upcoming selection of members of a new transitional parliament as undemocratic, after authorities postponed the process for Kurdish-controlled areas in the north and northeast.
After toppling longtime ruler Bashar Assad in December, Syria’s new authorities dissolved the parliament and adopted a temporary constitution for a five-year transition.
The selection of a transitional parliament is planned for September. Appointed local bodies will pick two-thirds of the 210 lawmakers and President Ahmed Al-Sharaa will name the rest.

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The selection of a transitional parliament is planned for September. Appointed local bodies will pick two-thirds of the 210 lawmakers and President Ahmed Al-Sharaa will name the rest.

But an election committee official said Saturday that the process would be postponed in Druze-majority Sweida province and Kurdish-held Raqqa and Hasakah provinces, citing “security challenges” and saying it could only go ahead in “territories controlled by the state.”
The Kurdish administration in the north and northeast said in a statement that “defining our regions as unsafe” was carried out “to justify the policy of denial for more than five million Syrians” in the area.
“These elections are neither democratic nor express the will of Syrians in any way,” it said.
“They simply represent a continuation of the approach of marginalization and exclusion that Syrians suffered over the past 52 years under the Baath regime” of the Assad dynasty, it added.
It warned that “nearly half of all Syrians” would be excluded from the process, including due to displacement.
The interim constitution has been criticized for concentrating power in Sharaa’s hands after decades of autocracy and for failing to reflect Syria’s ethnic and religious diversity.
The Kurdish administration called the parliamentary selection process “a superficial step that does not respond to the demands for a comprehensive political solution that Syrians need.”
“Any decision taken through this approach of exclusion will not concern us, and we will not consider it binding for the peoples and regions of northern and eastern Syria,” it added.
Damascus and the Kurds have been in talks on implementing a March 10 deal on integrating Kurdish institutions into those of the central government.
Implementation has been held up by differences between the two sides.
The Kurds have called for decentralization, which Damascus has rejected.
Druze-majority Sweida province saw deadly sectarian clashes last month, with access to the province still difficult and the security situation tense.


Hamas says will give up arms to a Palestinian authority ‘if occupation ends’

Updated 07 December 2025
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Hamas says will give up arms to a Palestinian authority ‘if occupation ends’

  • “We accept the deployment of UN forces as a separation force, tasked with monitoring the borders and ensuring compliance with the ceasefire in Gaza,” Hayya says

GAZA CITY, Palestinian Territories: Hamas said Saturday it was ready to hand over its weapons in the Gaza Strip to a Palestinian authority governing the territory on the condition that the Israeli army’s occupation ends.
“Our weapons are linked to the existence of the occupation and the aggression,” Hamas chief negotiator and its Gaza chief Khalil Al-Hayya said in a statement, adding: “If the occupation ends, these weapons will be placed under the authority of the state.” Asked by AFP, Hayya’s bureau said he was referring to a sovereign and independent Palestnian state.
“We accept the deployment of UN forces as a separation force, tasked with monitoring the borders and ensuring compliance with the ceasefire in Gaza,” Hayya added, signalling his group’s rejection of the deployment of an international force in the Strip whose mission would be to disarm it.