Chancellor Friedrich Merz has a simple message for many of the hundreds of
thousands of Syrians who found sanctuary in Germany during their country’s long
and brutal civil war: It’s time to go back to Syria.
In reality, it will be hard for Merz to compel a large share of the roughly one
million Syrians living in Germany to leave. But under pressure from the
far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party, whose leaders vow to forcibly
return Syrian refugees en masse, the chancellor is taking a harder line on
Germany’s Syrian population, and says he’ll work with Syria’s president, former
rebel leader Ahmed al-Sharaa, to do so.
“The civil war in Syria is over,” Merz said earlier this week. “There are now no
longer any grounds for asylum in Germany, which means we can begin repatriating
people.”
Merz’s comments reflect his latest push to move his conservatives sharply to the
right on the AfD’s signature issue of migration. Until now, the broad strategy
doesn’t appear to have worked, with the AfD only rising in popularity and coming
in slightly ahead of Merz’s conservatives in many recent polls.
Merz is seeking to undo the legacy of one of his conservative predecessors as
chancellor, Angela Merkel, whose generous asylum policies — particularly during
the refugee crisis of 2015 — made Germany the prime European destination for
Syrians and other migrant groups fleeing war and poverty. During Merkel’s tenure
and beyond, hundreds of thousands of Syrian refugees fled to Germany. Aside from
Ukrainians, Syrians constitute the largest group of refugees now living in the
country.
Merz blames Merkel’s migration policies for enabling the rise of the AfD, now
the largest opposition party in the German parliament. Over the summer, Merz
said his conservatives were “trying to correct” Merkel’s past policies. His
pledge to repatriate Syrians is one of his most direct efforts yet to do so.
It also echoes similar recent efforts of his government to establish contact
with Taliban officials to arrange deportations of Afghans living in Germany,
beginning with those convicted of crimes. Human rights groups have sharply
criticized those plans, saying returnees may be subject to harsh punishment and
persecution in Taliban-controlled Afghanistan.
Merz on Monday said he had invited al-Sharaa, a former al-Qaida member, to
Berlin in order to discuss deportations of Syrians convicted of crimes. Merz
also suggested that Syrians in Germany have a duty to return home to rebuild
their war-torn country.
“Without these people, reconstruction will not be possible,” Merz said. “Those
in Germany who then refuse to return to the country can, of course, be deported
in the near future.”
‘THEY MUST BE DEPORTED, WITH FORCE’
Merz’s deportation threat belies a far more complex reality on the ground.
In the several years that many Syrians have lived in Germany, a large number
have found jobs and become citizens. Some 287,000 Syrian citizens were working
in Germany last year, and about 83,000 became German citizens.
Despite the tough rhetoric, Merz has not said he will forcibly repatriate
Syrians outside of those who have committed crimes — at least not yet. His
government’s strategy for now appears to be to incentivize others to depart of
their own accord.
Yet experts say conditions in Syria are not stable and secure enough to allow
for many of the millions of Syrians who have fled the country to return anytime
soon. | Louai Beshara/Getty Images
But his government may also choose to model steps taken in the 1990s, when some
320,000 Bosnians came to Germany, fleeing the Bosnian War. By the next decade,
Germany had repatriated most of them.
Yet experts say conditions in Syria are not stable and secure enough to allow
for many of the millions of Syrians who have fled the country to return anytime
soon. This is a point Merz’s own foreign minister and fellow conservative,
Johann Wadephul, seemed to make during a visit to the ruins of a destroyed city
near Damascus last week, where he said it would be hard for many Syrians to
promptly return.
“I have never personally seen such extensive destruction,” Wadephul said. “I
could not have imagined it either. It is truly difficult for people to live with
dignity here.”
Those comments sparked pushback from within Merz’s conservative ranks as well as
among far-right politicians. Germans had rebuilt their country after World War
II, some argued — and now Syrians should do the same.
“Germans also lent a hand, especially a large number of women, to rebuild the
cities destroyed after World War II, so that cannot now be used as a fundamental
argument to say that it is impossible to return to this country and rebuild it,”
Stephan Mayer, a conservative parliamentarian from Bavaria told German newspaper
Welt.
The right-wing debate around Wadephul’s comments seems to have forced Merz to
contradict his foreign minister and take a harder stance on Syrian repatriations
— though it remains to be seen how far his government will really go,
particularly as Merz is governing in coalition with the center-left Social
Democratic Party (SPD), whose members advocate a softer approach. SPD leaders,
in fact, praised Wadephul for what they saw as his realism on the matter.
That’s one reason it will be hard for Merz to outcompete the AfD on his new
tough-on-migration turn. AfD leaders, from a comfortable perch in the
opposition, are taking a maximalist position, depicting Syrians in Germany
— hundreds of thousands of whom continue to receive basic income support — as a
unnecessary drain on German taxpayers for which only Merz’s conservatives can be
held responsible.
“We say quite clearly: Syrians must now have their protected status revoked
because the reason for their fleeing no longer applies,” AfD co-leader Alice
Weidel said on Tuesday. “These people must return to their homeland,” she went
on. “If they do not leave voluntarily, they must be deported, with force.”
Tag - War in Syria
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Außenminister Johann Wadephul sorgt mit seiner Syrien-Aussage für Aufruhr in der
Union. Gemeinsam mit Nikolaus Doll von WELT analysiert Gordon Repinski, wie
Wadephuls Worte die Partei spalten, warum der Kanzler eingreifen muss und
welches Kommunikationsproblem sich in der Regierung zeigt.
Im 200-Sekunden-Interview spricht Manuela Schwesig, Ministerpräsidentin von
Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, über ihre Erwartungen an den Kanzler, über Wirtschaft
und Arbeitsplätze im Norden und über den wachsenden Druck durch die AfD in ihrem
Bundesland.
Außerdem geht es nach New York, wo der Demokrat Zoran Mamdani bei den
Bürgermeisterwahlen den Wahlsieg holen könnte. Jonathan Martin von POLITICO in
den USA erklärt, warum der 34-Jährige trotz radikaler Positionen Chancen hat,
Bürgermeister der Hauptstadt des Kapitalismus zu werden und was das für die
US-Demokraten bedeutet.
Das Berlin Playbook als Podcast gibt es jeden Morgen ab 5 Uhr. Gordon Repinski
und das POLITICO-Team liefern Politik zum Hören – kompakt, international,
hintergründig.
Für alle Hauptstadt-Profis:
Der Berlin Playbook-Newsletter bietet jeden Morgen die wichtigsten Themen und
Einordnungen. Jetzt kostenlos abonnieren.
Mehr von Host und POLITICO Executive Editor Gordon Repinski:
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TURKEY’S ERDOĞAN BETS BIG WITH HIGH-STAKES KURDISH GAMBLE
As the president’s traditional support wanes, he is seeking a risky deal with
the Kurds to buy a political lifeline. But is there too much mutual mistrust for
a deal?
By ELÇIN POYRAZLAR
Photo-illustrations by Tarini Sharma for POLITICO
Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan is making the biggest gamble of his
career to save his political skin, just as popular opinion — even in
traditionalist, conservative strongholds — swings sharply against him.
His goal? To bring the large Kurdish minority onto his side by ending Turkey’s
most intractable political and military conflict that has killed some 40,000
people over four decades and has brutally scarred national life.
His move? To give a place in Turkish politics to Abdullah Öcalan, the jailed
leader of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party or PKK, an organization long
proscribed as terrorists by Ankara, the U.S. and EU.
It is a sign of Erdoğan’s plummeting fortunes that he is even contemplating such
a radical step to keep his grip over the NATO heavyweight of 85 million people.
But the Islamist populist knows this is his moment to try to consolidate his
position as president — potentially for life — or risk being wiped off the
political scene.
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Since suffering crushing defeats at the hands of the secular opposition in the
municipal elections of 2024 — most significantly in conservative bastions —
Erdoğan has made an increasingly desperate lurch toward full authoritarianism.
Istanbul Mayor Ekrem İmamoğlu has been thrown in jail and the security services
have launched a nationwide crackdown to arrest opposition mayors. The allies who
supported Erdoğan on his rise to power have largely deserted him.
While the need for a new support base helps explain Erdoğan’s Kurdish gambit,
it’s a high-risk move with no guarantee of success. Mainstream Turkish opinion
is very wary of the PKK, and the Kurds themselves are extremely nervous about
trusting the Turkish authorities. This deal is far from an easy sell.
Some initial progress is expected on Friday with a first batch of PKK weapons to
be handed over in northern Iraq, probably in the predominantly Kurdish province
of Sulaymaniyah.
Erdoğan is widely seen as the engineer of the Kurdish rapprochement when his
regional diplomacy is also enjoying success. . | Mustafa Kamaci/Anadolu via
Getty Images
While publicly proclaiming the importance of his “terror-free Turkey” project
for reconciliation with the Kurds, Erdoğan is also showing he is wide awake to
the risks. He has conceded his project faces “sabotage” from within Turkey, and
from within the ranks of the PKK.
Sensing some of the potential hostility to his PKK deal, in an address to
parliament on Wednesday, the president was careful to pre-empt any attacks from
political adversaries that an accord could dishonor veterans or other casualties
of the conflict.
“Nowhere in the efforts for a terror-free Turkey is there, nor can there be, a
step that will tarnish the memory of our martyrs or injure their spirits,” he
said. “Guided by the values for which our martyrs made their sacrifices, God
willing, we are saving Turkey from a half-century-long calamity and completely
removing this bloody shackle that has been placed upon our country.”
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The jailed Öcalan, speaking in his first video since 1999, said on Wednesday
that the PKK movement and its previous quest for a separate Kurdish nation-state
were now at an end, as its core demand — the recognition of Kurdish existence —
has been met.
“Existence has been recognized and therefore the primary objective has been
achieved. In this sense, it is outdated … This is a voluntary transition from
the phase of armed struggle to the phase of democratic politics and law. This is
not a loss, but should be seen as a historic achievement,” he said in his video.
ISLAND PRISON
No issue in Turkish politics is more bitter than the Kurdish conflict. Some
Kurds describe themselves as the most numerous stateless people in the world —
there are millions in neighboring Iraq, Iran and Syria, and in Turkey they
account for approximately 15 to 20 percent of the population.
Many Kurds say they have been denied their rights since the formation of the
Turkish republic just over a century ago and have long been oppressed.
In turn, many Turks see the PKK, which long waged war against the Turkish state,
as a terrorist group — and its leader Öcalan, who has been confined to a prison
island all this century, as a murderer.
Given the explosive range of feelings about Öcalan, it is remarkable that such a
personality will prove so central to securing Erdoğan’s deal.
Öcalan, center, calls on the organization to disarm, in a video recorded in
prison and published Wednesday. | Tunahan Turhan/LightRocket via Getty Images
Known as “Apo,” he is serving a life sentence for treason and separatism on the
island of
İmralı in the Sea of Marmara. Notorious in part due to the movie “Midnight
Express,”
İmralı is referred to as “Turkey’s Alcatraz” and has held Öcalan, for several
years as its sole inmate, since 1999.
He is no longer alone. During the peace process between 2013 and 2015, a number
of PKK prisoners were transferred to İmralı to serve as part of Öcalan’s
unofficial secretariat.
While the Kurdish policy of Erdoğan and his AK Party has oscillated between
crackdowns and conciliation during their 22 years in power, Turkey’s hard-line
nationalists have long denounced the PKK as a threat and had little time for
Kurdish rights.
Perhaps the most outspoken enemy of Öcalan has been a veteran politician called
Devlet Bahçeli, an ultranationalist leader, who is now Erdoğan’s main ally,
helping him pad out his parliamentary majority.
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In 2007, Bahçeli had even called for Öcalan to be executed. Ten years ago he
lashed out at Erdoğan over one of his sporadic attempts to negotiate with the
PKK.
But last October, in one of the sudden shake-ups that intermittently convulse
politics in Turkey, Bahçeli suggested Öcalan could address parliament — as long
as he dissolved the PKK.
The significance of the volte-face can hardly be overstated — it was almost as
if Benjamin Netanyahu had extended an invitation to Hamas — and behind it all
was Erdoğan.
The effect was dramatic. On Feb. 27, Öcalan sent a public message from his
prison, calling for the PKK to give up its arms and terminate itself.
Öcalan credited both Bahçeli’s call, and Erdoğan’s willpower, for helping
“create an environment” for the group to disarm. “I take on the historical
responsibility of this call,” he added. “Convene your congress and make a
decision: All groups must lay down their arms and the PKK must dissolve
itself,” he added.
The PKK Congress duly declared the end of the armed struggle on May 12, adding
the group had “fulfilled its historical mission” and that, as Öcalan had
instructed, “all activities conducted under the PKK name have therefore been
concluded.”
The statement was welcomed in Ankara, but so far, the gambit by Bahçeli and
Erdoğan has yet to fully pay off. There is clearly more work to do. And sure
enough, after the watershed statement from Öcalan in February, the prisoner
gained more staff on İmralı. According to politicians from the pro-Kurdish DEM
Party who spoke to POLITICO, three more prisoners were sent to expand the team
available for striking a grand bargain.
LITTLE TRUST
Nurcan Baysal, a Kurdish human rights campaigner and author of the book “We
Exist: Being Kurdish In Turkey,” said many Kurds remained wary of the
government.
“The government is presenting this as a ‘terror-free Turkey’ process and is
trying to limit it to just the PKK laying down its weapons and dissolving
itself. This is not peace!” she told POLITICO.
Baysal said Öcalan’s declaration in February to dissolve the PKK was also met
with disappointment among Kurds because he didn’t say anything about the Kurds’
cultural, linguistic, administrative rights and freedoms.
Öcalan, flanked by masked officers on a flight from Kenya to Turkey, in 1999. |
Hurriyet Ho via Getty Images
“This is felt in all Kurdish cities. There is not the slightest enthusiasm about
the process. A serious reason for this is that the Kurds do not trust
[Erdoğan’s] AK Party government,” she continued.
This mutual mistrust is partially the legacy of the failed initiatives of the
past, and the fact that Erdoğan’s deal comes amid a major clampdown on the
opposition.
İpek Özbey, a political commentator for the secularist channel Sözcü TV,
reckoned the Turkish government’s apparent moves toward a Kurdish rapprochement
were neither sincere nor promising.
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“We cannot talk about democracy in an environment where elected officials are in
prison … and the independence of the judiciary is so much under discussion,” she
said. “If there is no democracy, how will we democratize?”
During the reporting of this article, several government-allied figures also
made clear their unease with Erdoğan’s Kurdish initiative, describing the issue
as explosive or signaling their own lack of belief in the process, but declined
to talk on the record.
ONLY ERDOĞAN
From the government camp, Harun Armağan, the AK Party’s vice chair of foreign
affairs, conceded that Turkish public opinion remained cautious about the PKK
deal, but cast Erdoğan as the only man who could pull it off.
He told POLITICO that the PKK reached the stage of laying down arms 10 years ago
but “due to changing dynamics in Syria [where allied Kurdish fighters were on
the rise], they thought investing in war rather than peace would put them in a
more advantageous position.
“Ten years later, they have realized how gravely mistaken that was,” Armağan
continued. “Whether the PKK will truly disarm and dismantle itself is something
we will all see together … Recep Tayyip Erdoğan is the only leader in Türkiye
who could initiate such a process.”
Erdoğan has already served three terms as president. To remain in office he may
need to change the constitution. | Beata Zawrzel/NurPhoto via Getty Images
“The only promise made by the government is to completely rid Türkiye of
terrorism and to build a future in which all 85 million citizens can live in
peace, prosperity, and freedom to the fullest,” he added.
Erdoğan is indeed widely seen as the engineer of the Kurdish rapprochement when
his regional diplomacy is also enjoying success.
He has been hailed by U.S. President Donald Trump as the main winner from the
fall of Bashar Assad in Syria, where the new government has strong ties to
Ankara. Erdoğan is trying to take advantage of his clout by severing ties
between Syrian Kurdish groups and the PKK.
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Baysal, the Kurdish human rights campaigner, reckoned the change of events in
Syria is the main reason why the Turkish government initiated its Kurdish
outreach.
But Armağan, the AK Party official, insisted the two processes were distinct.
“This [Syrian] process is entirely different from our own process of eliminating
terrorism,” he said.
“The Syrian government has already called on all armed groups to join a central
army, and the SDF [a prominent Syrian Kurdish group] has signed an agreement to
this effect. These are promising developments,” he said.
PRESIDENT FOR LIFE
Some observers think Erdoğan, a formidable political operator, is using the
Kurdish process inside and outside the country to extend his stay in power,
trying to recruit Kurdish parliamentarians into his camp.
That’s certainly the view of DEM Party Group Deputy Chair Sezai Temelli.
But he’s cautious about whether it will work, given broader democratic
backsliding. He argued the arrest of Istanbul Mayor İmamoğlu, Erdoğan’s rival,
was hurting this fragile process and that the “Kurdish democratic solution and
the Turkish democratization process have a symbiotic relationship.”
He added he would not be surprised to see Erdoğan seeking to capitalize on the
process to stay in power, but noted that the CHP, Turkey’s main opposition
party, had also pledged to resolve the Kurdish issue if it wins the next
election.
No issue in Turkish politics is more bitter than the Kurdish conflict. Some
Kurds describe themselves as the most numerous stateless people in the world. |
Tunahan Turhan/LightRocket via Getty Images
“‘Who is not using it? Some use it [the Kurdish issue] to come to power, some
use it to stay in power,” Temelli said. “But we say this could only be solved
independently of election and power calculations.”
Erdoğan has already served three terms as president. To remain in office he may
need to change the constitution.
Despite the support of Bahçeli, the president’s coalition does not have a
sufficient majority for constitutional change so Erdoğan may be counting on the
support of Kurdish members of parliament.
He has already started speaking openly about a new constitution to replace
Turkey’s 1980 charter, which was drawn up by a military regime after a bloody
coup.
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“Türkiye for the first time in its history, has a real opportunity to draft its
first civilian constitution. This is a significant opportunity for all of us to
build a more prosperous, just, and secure country,” Armağan said.
Not everybody agrees. Some look back at past constitutional changes under
Erdoğan and say the main purpose of further revision to the charter would be, as
in the past, to further the president’s political ambitions.
Soner Çağaptay of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, said Erdoğan
was acting like a “parallel computer,” executing opposing political strategies —
cracking down on the main opposition, while reaching out to the Kurds whose
support he needs to stay in office — without the two competing policies tripping
over each other.
“He will do anything to get one more term as president and then basically
install himself as president for life,” Çağaptay told POLITICO.
Erdoğan’s Kurdish gambit is a high-risk move with no guarantee of success. |
Adem Altan/AFP via Getty Images
But Baysal observed not everything relied on Erdoğan’s ambitions.
“Erdoğan is a politician who has the potential to use every issue for his own
benefit, and he will not hesitate to instrumentalize the Kurdish issue. He will
definitely want to use this to extend his presidency,” she said.
But it is not just the president who will decide, she said. Ultimately, whether
Turkey’s tragic Kurdish conflict is consigned to history — and whether Erdoğan
reaps the benefit — will depend in large part on the Kurds themselves.
“I think the real issue here is not whether he wants it,” said Baysal, referring
to Erdoğan, “but whether the Kurds want it.”
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Designierter Kulturstaatsminister: Warum die Kritik an Wolfram Weimers
Positionen das eine ist, für Merz aber die Nähe der beiden, lange vor Wahlkampf
und Kanzlerkandidatur, aber ein Geschmäckle hat, analysiert Gordon Repinski.
Im 200-Sekunden-Interview: Nancy Faeser über ihren Besuch in Syrien, die Zukunft
der Migrationspolitik unter Schwarz-Rot und ihre künftige Rolle in Partei
und/oder Regierung.
Antrittsbesuch in Brüssel: Warum Johann Wadephul dem Kanzler im Machtzentrum der
EU zuvor kommt und wie die Union ihre Außenpolitik aufstellt, berichtet Hans von
der Burchard.
Und: Deutsch-niederländische Verständigung bei Bitterballen und Bier.
Das Berlin Playbook als Podcast gibt es morgens um 5 Uhr. Gordon Repinski und
das POLITICO-Team bringen euch jeden Morgen auf den neuesten Stand in Sachen
Politik — kompakt, europäisch, hintergründig.
Und für alle Hauptstadt-Profis:
Unser Berlin Playbook-Newsletter liefert jeden Morgen die wichtigsten Themen und
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Mehr von Berlin Playbook-Host und Executive Editor von POLITICO in Deutschland,
Gordon Repinski, gibt es auch hier:
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BRUSSELS — The European Union’s diplomatic arm will hold an emergency meeting on
Thursday to deal with 55,000 ISIS-linked detainees, some of which are EU
citizens, after the United States abruptly paused much of its aid to the two
camps in Syria.
Al Hol and Roj camps have in recent years been seen as a means to contain the
Islamic State, even more so since the ouster of dictator Bashar Assad in
December 2024.
The meeting will be with all concerned services and cabinets, and EU partners,
said one of the two EU officials. Both were granted anonymity to speak openly
about the sensitive matter.
“The EU citizens there are not necessarily people member states will be rushing
to welcome back in a disorganized manner,” said the first EU official.
The camps, run by U.S. Kurdish allies in Syria, relied primarily on
international aid, including hundreds of millions of dollars from the U.S.
Following President Donald Trump’s move to attempt to shut down the U.S. Agency
for International Development, officials in Brussels were concerned this could
trigger both a humanitarian and security crisis in Syria unless the funding gaps
are plugged.
The two camps house primarily women and children, and none of the people in
these “closed camps” have been charged with crimes. Human rights organizations
have pointed out some of the people in those camps fled ISIS themselves and
people have been detained in dire conditions, with allegations of torture and
violence.
“We are very conscious we have a new situation with the camps handed over to the
central government and the government having difficulties controlling its
territory,” said the second EU official. “We need to find measures that ensure
that the terrorists don’t come to Europe.”
In recent months the EU has made overt movements to push the millions of Syrians
within its borders to return to their home country after the end of Assad’s
rule, and a 14-year civil war. In the hours and days after his downfall,
Austria, Belgium, France, Germany, Greece, Italy, Sweden and the U.K. paused the
handling of asylum applications, with authorities saying the fears from which
Syrians fled no longer existed.
Since December, EU donors have attempted to cover some of the humanitarian and
security concerns faced by the new Syrian government as it attempts to unify a
country split into more than a dozen territories during the civil war.
This looming meeting comes after international donors hosted by the EU pledged
nearly €6 billion this week in Brussels to assist the new Syrian government that
took the place of Assad. In recent months, the bloc has made efforts to
reestablish diplomatic ties with Syria, including the lifting sanctions.
Earlier this month, violence erupted in northwestern Syria when Assad-affiliated
insurgents attacked Syrian government-backed security forces. In retaliatory
attacks, security forces killed more than 1,000 people, primarily Alawite
civilians, a religious minority the Assad family hails from.
A spokesperson for the EEAS did not respond for comment.
European Union countries will continue to back Syria’s new leadership through
both financial aid and sanctions relief despite an outbreak of sectarian
violence threatening the country’s stability, the bloc’s foreign ministers said
Monday.
Germany led the charge by pledging €300 million in support for food, health and
other essential services for Syria’s population, as the EU’s top diplomat Kaja
Kallas said the bloc will continue to lift sanctions against Syria.
“As Europeans, we stand together for the people of Syria, for a free and
peaceful Syria,” German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock added ahead of an
annual donor conference for Syria in Brussels.
In a lightning revolution late last year, Syrian rebels — led by former al-Qaeda
commander Ahmed al-Sharaa — overthrew Bashar Assad’s decades-long dictatorship,
ushering in a fragile new system of governance in a country wracked by religious
and ethnic rivalries.
In recent days, gunmen from the Alawite Islamic minority, affiliated with Assad,
targeted Syrian security personnel, sparking retaliatory and extrajudicial
killings by forces allied with al-Sharaa’s new government. Thousands of Alawites
have since fled, including to neighboring Lebanon, while hundreds of Alawite
civilians have also been killed, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human
Rights.
Kallas insisted the bloc needed to double down on its support for Syrian, while
striking a note of caution. “The violence outbreak is really worrying,” she
said.
“It shows that hope in Syria is really hanging by a thread. This shows that we
need to do more to really show that Syria is going in the right direction,” she
added.
Syrian Foreign Minister Asaad al-Shibani is joining the aid conference in
Brussels, along with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, Kallas
and EU foreign ministers.
A senior EU official said last week they hoped additional funding would help
Syria “turn a page” on 14 years of civil war, amid concerns that a freeze on
international aid from the United States could worsen the situation on the
ground.
The EU has spearheaded efforts to restore diplomatic ties with Syria in recent
months, including by lifting sanctions originally imposed against Assad’s
regime, with several leaders pushing to send Syrian migrants who lack legal
status in Europe back to their home country.
More than 1,000 people have died in two days of clashes and revenge killings in
Syria as the country’s security forces allegedly killed hundreds of civilians
belonging to the Alawite religious minority, a war monitoring group said.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said about 745 civilians were killed on
Friday and Saturday in ongoing violence along the country’s coast, along with
125 members of government security forces and 148 fighters from armed groups
linked to ousted Syrian leader Bashar Assad.
Syrian President Ahmad al-Sharaa called for national unity on Sunday, saying the
country “has the characteristics for survival” and that what is happening in
Syria now is “within the expected challenges.”
“We must preserve national unity and internal peace, we can live together,”
Sharaa said in a video quoted by Reuters, speaking at a mosque in his childhood
neighborhood of Mazzah in Damascus.
The clashes erupted on Thursday and marked a major escalation in the challenge
to the new government led by Sharaa’s movement Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, or HTS,
three months after the insurgents took over following the removal of Assad from
power.
Assad was ousted last December after decades of dynastic rule by his family,
marked by severe repression and a devastating civil war. Alawites, however, had
been a large part of Assad’s support base for decades.
Authorities blamed the Alawite-targeted summary executions and deadly raids on
unruly armed militias who came to help security forces and have long blamed
Assad’s supporters for past crimes.
Clashes continued overnight in several towns, and a security official told
Reuters that pro-Assad insurgents were now escalating their campaign, staging
hit-and-run attacks on several public utilities in the past 24 hours.
The outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), a Kurdish militant group, on
Saturday declared a cease-fire with Turkey, following a call from its imprisoned
leader, Abdullah Öcalan, to disarm and dissolve.
The announcement comes after four decades of armed conflict that has claimed
more than 40,000 lives.
The PKK’s statement said the cease-fire was aimed to “pave the way for the
implementation of leader Apo’s call for peace and democratic society,” referring
to Öcalan by his widely used nickname .
The group added that “none of our forces will take armed action unless
attacked,” but it stopped short of declaring its disbandment, stating that such
a decision could only be taken under his direct guidance and within a broader
political process.
Öcalan’s call comes amid political signals from Turkey’s ruling coalition
suggesting the PKK leader, imprisoned on an island off Istanbul since 1999,
could be granted parole if the group disbanded. In his message, Öcalan argued
that armed struggle was no longer a viable solution and urged Kurdish political
movements to seek democratic participation .
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan welcomed the development, calling
Öcalan’s appeal a “historic opportunity” for ending the conflict. His government
signaled it would closely monitor the situation to ensure a full PKK dissolution
but has also demanded that affiliated groups in Iraq and Syria follow suit.
Spanish socialist lawmaker Nacho Sánchez Amor, the European Parliament’s lead
member on Turkey relations, described Öcalan’s call as a “historic step” and
urged both sides to seize the moment for an inclusive political resolution.
The PKK, designated as a terrorist organization by Turkey, the EU and the U.S.,
has waged an insurgency against the Turkish state since 1984, initially seeking
an independent Kurdish state before later shifting its demands toward greater
autonomy and rights for Kurds. Past ceasefire attempts — most notably a
2013-2015 peace process — collapsed amid renewed violence .
The EU on Monday lifted a number of economic sanctions on Syria, after the fall
of Bashar Assad’s regime late last year.
“We will go forward with the suspension of sanctions against Syria,” the EU’s
foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas said before a meeting of foreign ministers in
Brussels. “This includes the transport, energy and banking sectors.”
The sanctions relief aims to support “an inclusive political transition in
Syria, and its swift economic recovery, reconstruction and stabilization,” said
the official Council of the EU statement.
The EU had previously agreed to gradually ease sanctions it imposed on the
country as a result of the violent 2011 crackdown on protesters by Assad’s
government, resulting in a civil war that killed hundreds of thousands of
people.
Assad, who ruled Syria with an iron fist for almost a quarter of a century, fled
to Russia after opposition forces swept the country and stormed the Syrian
capital in December. The country is now governed by a new president, Ahmad
al-Sharaa, formerly known as Abu Mohammed al-Jolani.
The EU continues to list Al-Sharaa’s organization, Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, as a
terrorist organization, while European Commission President Ursula von der
Leyen in December warned that the regime change in Syria “offers opportunities
but is not without risks.”
The British government has signalled for the first time it will loosen long-held
sanctions on Syria, after the fall of the Assad regime.
U.K. Minister of State Stephen Doughty told MPs in a written statement the
government would bring forward measures “in the coming months” to adapt the
existing sanctions regime on Syria.
MPs will have the opportunity to debate any sanctions amendments, Doughty said,
adding that the government will maintain asset freezes and travel bans imposed
on members of the former regime.
“We are making these changes to support the Syrian people in re-building their
country and promote security and stability. They will include the relaxation of
restrictions that apply to the energy, transport and finance sectors, and
provisions to further support humanitarian delivery,” Doughty wrote in the
statement.
Thursday’s announcement comes after the collapse of the Assad regime in December
2024. Foreign Secretary David Lammy said in January that the Labour government
was, alongside allies, reviewing sanctions, but provided no further detail at
that time.
Syria was first sanctioned by Britain when it was a member of the European
Union, and the government later enacted its own sanctions against the regime
after Brexit.
Britain’s sanctions against Syria are against “the Syrian regime,” which is
defined as “the regime in Syria on or after 9 May 2011 led by Bashar Al-Assad.”
Assad’s wife, Asma, is a British citizen, although Lammy has said she is not
welcome in the U.K.
Syria’s transitional President, Ahmed al-Sharaa, is the leader of Hay’at Tahrir
al-Sham. HTS is still defined as a terrorist organisation by the U.K.