Syrian authorities on Thursday removed a bilingual Kurdish-Arabic billboard from the Justice Palace in Hasaka, the largest city in Syria’s Kurdish-majority northeast, replacing it with signage in English and Arabic only. The move ignited immediate public fury. Locals gathered outside the building chanting “Kurdistan” before forcibly tearing down the newly installed sign, an act of defiance underscoring how language rights remain a volatile fault line despite formal legal protections. The exclusion of Kurdish directly contradicts Presidential Decree No. 13 of 2026, signed by President Ahmed al-Sharaa on January 16. That decree recognized Kurdish as a national language alongside Arabic for the first time in Syrian legal history. It also restored citizenship to Syrian Kurds stripped in the notorious 1962 Hasaka census, authorized Kurdish-language instruction in schools with sizable Kurdish populations, designated Nowruz as a paid national holiday, and explicitly prohibited ethnic or lingu...
Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) has launched a new wave of drone strikes against Kurdish opposition bases in the Kurdistan Region, intensifying a campaign of cross-border attacks that has persisted despite a fragile ceasefire between Tehran and Washington. The Kurdistan Democratic Party of Iran (KDPI) reported that three drones struck the Zewi Aspi base in Koya district at 23:10 local time on Wednesday, hours after two separate drones hit a residential camp housing the families of party members at Girde Chal near Erbil. The dual assault marked the second attack on PDKI bases in a single day, underscoring Tehran's relentless targeting of exiled Kurdish groups even as U.S. officials signal progress toward a broader diplomatic understanding with Iran. The latest strikes are part of a disturbing pattern that has unfolded since late February, when the United States and Israel launched a six-week military campaign against Iranian nuclear and military facilities. Accor...