
4 arrested in Afrin for raising Kurdistan flag
270,000 Syrian refugees return home: UNHCR
USAID suspension worsens conditions in Rojava camps: Watchdog
SDF could be 'significant asset' for Syrian army: Brigade spokesperson
ENKS withdraws from Syrian opposition coalition
A+ A-
ERBIL, Kurdistan Region - Four young Kurdish men were arrested in Afrin on Friday, a day after they raised the Kurdistan flag during a spontaneous reception for security forces affiliated with the new leadership in Damascus, according to a local human rights monitor.
'Members of the Military Police, affiliated with the [National] Coalition of Syrian Revolutionary and Opposition Forces, arrested the four young men in Afrin for raising the Kurdistan flag during the arrival of the Syrian government's security forces,' said Human Rights Organization-Afrin.
One of the men has been identified as Mohammad Abdul Qader Ahmed from the district of Jindires in the Afrin countryside. The names of the others have not been published. The four were arrested in the early morning hours on Friday and taken to an undisclosed location, the organization said.
The Syrian interior ministry confirmed on Thursday the arrival of its forces in Afrin but did not specify the reason for the visit. Informed sources told Rudaw that the convoy's visit was part of a tour of the region.
A number of Kurds in Afrin welcomed the visiting forces, raising the flags of Kurdistan and Syria to express their joy about the possibility that various armed factions could cede control of the area to the new government. For seven years, the militia groups have committed numerous violations against the Kurdish people in Afrin, drawing international condemnation.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Shafaq News
2 hours ago
- Shafaq News
Iraq FM: Conflict spillover would devastate Iraq, diplomacy is the only shield
Shafaq News – Baghdad Iraqi Foreign Minister Fuad Hussein warned that any attempt to drag Iraq into regional wars would 'destroy' the country and the armed factions, stressing that Baghdad rejects the notion of unified battlefronts and insists Iraq's arena is solely its own. In a televised interview aired Saturday on Shams TV, Hussein outlined Iraq's approach to armed groups, the Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF) Law, relations with Iran and the United States, the Erbil–Baghdad dispute, regional conflicts, and the future of Kurds in Syria. وزير الخارجية العراقي فؤاد حسين: لولا قوات التحالف الدولي لكان تنظيم "دا.عــ.ـش" يسيطر على أجزاء واسعة من العراق. #العراق #فؤاد_حسين — Shams TV قناة شمس (@shamsnewstv) August 17, 2025 Avoiding Regional War Hussein credited Iraq's survival amid neighboring conflicts to a dual-track approach: dialogue with armed groups at home and diplomacy abroad. He revealed Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani and Shia leaders had warned faction commanders of the dangers of unilateral actions, while Baghdad reached out to Washington and European capitals to prevent Israel's war from spilling into Iraq. 'We made it clear that Iraq has only one arena, which is Iraqi, and we reject the concept of unified battlefronts,' Hussein pointed out, warning that dragging Iraq into conflict would destroy the country and its factions. He added that despite some continued strikes on US bases, Baghdad's firm position had restrained wider escalation. Disarmament and the PMF Law On why 'militias' could be contained but not disarmed, Hussein affirmed that force was not an option. ' Disarmament by violence would risk civil war,' he cautioned, arguing instead for Shia dialogue first, followed by a national dialogue across communities. 'Weapons outside state control remain unacceptable but must be addressed through reason, not confrontation.' He compared Iraq's situation to Lebanon, where decades of failed attempts to disarm Hezbollah showed that 'the language of arms only produces more destruction.' Regarding the PMF Authority Law in parliament, Hussein said he was the only minister to object, citing the tense regional climate. 'Sometimes an issue is valid, but the timing is wrong,' he said, noting that such legislation has unavoidable security and military implications. Relations with Iran and the United States Hussein rejected claims that Tehran dictates Baghdad's decisions. 'It is not true to say Iran rules Iraq, but it is also not true to say Iran has no influence,' he remarked, pointing to Iraq's weakened sovereignty since UN sanctions in 1991 and the 2003 invasion. On Iranian National Security Adviser Ali Larijani's visit, he described it as a routine trip, not a special mission. Discussions focused on bilateral ties and avoiding wider war. He added that Tehran thanked both Baghdad and the Kurdistan Region for their positions during the recent 12-day conflict inside Iran. As for Washington, Hussein confirmed US opposition to the PMF law but said Iraq's national interest requires a single military authority. He underscored Iraq's reliance on the Global Coalition, noting that without its intervention, ISIS would still control Baghdad and Erbil. 'Now the question is—who will protect Iraq if another war comes?' he asked. Iraq's Neutrality and Soft Power Hussein rejected labeling Iraq as neutral. 'We are against war. That is not neutrality—it is principle,' he said, explaining that Iraq lacks 'hard power' and instead must rely on diplomacy and soft power to safeguard its interests. Erbil–Baghdad Relations On ties with the Kurdistan Region, Hussein considered the root of the dispute lies in Baghdad's centralist mindset, which clashes with the federal constitution. He pointed to the absence of long-promised legislation, including the Oil and Gas Law and the Federal Council, which has forced reliance on outdated centralist laws, describing the current oil revenue-sharing deal as temporary, and stressing that a lasting arrangement must guarantee the Kurdistan Region's fixed share without federal interference in salaries or local revenues. Syria, the Kurds, and Regional Stability Turning to Syria, Hussein related the instability there to Iraq, warning that Syria remains fragmented with the presence of Turkiye, US, French, Israeli, and Russian forces, in addition to ISIS remnants. 'This reality requires new approaches based on decentralization and democracy,' he argued, stressing that centralization fuels division while decentralization can preserve unity. On Kurdish aspirations, he said independence is not on the agenda. 'Dreams remain dreams, but reality is different. Kurds in Syria are struggling for rights within a democratic, decentralized state, not for separation.'


Shafaq News
5 hours ago
- Shafaq News
Attack on vehicles in southern Syria injures 4
Shafaq News – Daraa On Sunday, unidentified assailants opened fire with light weapons on a civilian car and a passenger bus traveling from Suwayda toward Damascus, the capital of Syria, via the Busra al-Sham humanitarian corridor. Shafaq News correspondent confirmed that four people, including a child and a woman, were wounded in the attack near the Kahil area, with both vehicles damaged. No information has yet emerged regarding the perpetrators or their motives. On Friday, a woman died of her injuries after gunmen attacked two civilian cars in the same area as they crossed from Suwayda toward Damascus. The Syrian Civil Defense announced that a total of 97 families—comprising 385 people, including women and children—left Suwayda province individually through the Busra al-Sham crossing, adding that 57 families, totaling 227 people, also returned to Suwayda through the same crossing. Tensions in Suwayda have escalated in recent weeks following clashes between Druze, Bedouins, and government factions. Although a ceasefire was brokered, exchanges of mortars and heavy weapons have continued. Local and human rights groups accuse the Syrian government of enforcing a blockade on the province, while Damascus denies the allegation and insists that humanitarian aid deliveries remain uninterrupted.


Shafaq News
20 hours ago
- Shafaq News
Car explosion hits central Damascus
Shafaq News / Damascus (updated at 22:42) A car explosion on Saturday rocked al-Mazzeh highway near the Golden Mazzeh Hotel, one of the busiest roads in central Damascus. Syrian security forces later confirmed that the blast was caused by an improvised explosive device (IED) planted inside an old, long-abandoned vehicle — a vintage Austin model — parked near the highway. Brigadier General Osama Muhammad Khair Atika, head of internal security in Damascus, said the explosion resulted in no casualties or significant material damage. He added that the bomb appeared to have been placed well in advance, and that the site is being thoroughly examined by specialized units to ensure public safety and rule out any additional threats. Earlier today, a local source told Shafaq News that ambulances were dispatched to the location and security forces had sealed off the vicinity while launching an initial investigation. انفـ ـجـ ـار سيارة بالقرب من فندق غولدن في #المزة — المرصد السوري لحقوق الإنسان (@syriahr) August 16, 2025