ERBIL, Kurdistan Region - Some 3,000 Kurdish families have fled the ongoing violence in Aleppo’s Kurdish-majority Ashrafiyeh and Sheikh Maqsood neighborhoods, a coalition of Kurdish parties from northeast Syria (Rojava) reported Thursday, noting that these individuals had originally been displaced in 2018 from the Kurdish city of Afrin in northwestern Syria.
The Syrian Arab Army resumed attacks on the two predominantly Kurdish neighborhoods for the third consecutive day on Thursday after announcing a 1:30 pm curfew ahead of intensifying its operations. The Kurdish internal security forces (Asayish) in Aleppo said Thursday that the attacks by state forces have killed at least eight “civilians” and injured over 60 others since Tuesday.
Ahmed Hassan, the representative of the Kurdish National Council (ENKS/KNC) in Afrin, told Rudaw that the violence prompted “more than 3,000 families have been forced over the past two days to leave their homes in two Kurdish neighborhoods of Aleppo and return to Afrin.” He added that “donors are providing vehicles to transport Kurdish families from Ashrafiyeh and Sheikh Maqsood to Afrin.”
Afrin fell under the control of Turkish-backed Syrian militias in 2018, forcing thousands of Kurdish residents to flee to the neighboring Shahba district and to Aleppo’s Kurdish quarters.
