Mr President,
Ladies and gentlemen,
My name is Ferhad Ahma, and I am speaking here on behalf of
PÊL – Civil Waves Organization.
The challenges faced by Syrian minorities are not limited to the attempts to forcibly
displace these groups from their areas of origin; but also include various policies and
practices aimed at eradicating local ethnic cultures, as well as different religious and
cultural groups.
To date, there has been no constitutional recognition of the ethnic and religious
pluralism in Syria since the state was established. The Syrian state has failed in its
duty to protect local cultures, and to provide millions of Syrians the educational
opportunities to learn in their native languages, such as the Kurds.
After 2011, when many inhabitants in the northeast of Syria were granted the
opportunity to learn their native languages for the first time in the history of the state,
this was in areas that broke away from state control. In the areas occupied by Turkey
since 2018, the Turkish state has conducted policies aimed at limiting the use of the
Kurdish language, as well as other local languages. It has gradually and systematically
removed these languages from the different levels of education.
In parallel with these policies, Turkey is actively undertaking a process of Turkification
of the educational system in the areas it has invaded in northern Syria, in order to tie
these areas to it and alter their cultural identity.
The practices of Turkey and those of the Syrian military factions connected to it are not
limited to restricting the Kurdish language and culture, but have extended to the
deliberate destruction of numerous historical sites in Afrin, particularly, as well as
stealing the contents of the same.
Furthermore, the various Turkish authorities present in Afrin, Ras al-Ayn, and Tell
Abyad in particular, have ignored the serious violations committed by military groups
and have failed to exert any effort in preventing these militia from attacking local
inhabitants from national and religious minorities, such as the Kurds and Yazidis. These
armed groups affiliated with the Syrian National Army have seized thousands of houses
and the possessions of original inhabitants. To date, they are also preventing those
displaced from returning and reclaiming their possessions.
Within this framework, Turkey has failed to perform its obligations as an occupying
force, as it has not protected the possessions of the original inhabitants. It has further
failed to perform its duties in protecting the holy religious sites of the Yazidi people,