IDLIB: A Syrian family is seen at a shelter after a convoy of buses and ambulances transporting wounded civilians and rebels from the Syrian villages of Zabadani and Madaya arrived in the area of Idlib yesterday during an operation in cooperation with the United Nations to evacuate hundreds of wounded people from besieged Syrian towns. --AFP IDLIB: A Syrian family is seen at a shelter after a convoy of buses and ambulances transporting wounded civilians and rebels from the Syrian villages of Zabadani and Madaya arrived in the area of Idlib yesterday during an operation in cooperation with the United Nations to evacuate hundreds of wounded people from besieged Syrian towns. --AFP

QAMISHLI, Syria: Fifty Syrian pro-government fighters surrendered yesterday to Kurdish forces in the northeastern city of Qamishli, a Kurdish security source said as fighting raged for the second consecutive day. "A group of fighters loyal to the regime were taking cover in a prison in Qamishli, and Kurdish forces gave them until noon to hand themselves in," a Kurdish security source told AFP.

"When they didn't, the Kurdish forces stormed the prison, and the 50 regime fighters surrendered," he said. He said other regime fighters from around the city were firing rockets at the prison.

Fighting between the Kurdish police force, known as the Asayish, and fighters from the pro-regime National Defence Forces erupted on Wednesday after a scuffle at a checkpoint in the city. It resumed at around midday yesterday, an AFP reporter said, adding that loud blasts from heavy weapons were heard across the city. The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said that since Wednesday 10 NDF fighters, four Kurdish forces and two civilians have been killed.

Meanwhile, the Islamic State group claimed in a statement that it carried out a suicide bombing in Qamishli yesterday afternoon that caused several casualties.

The claim could not be independently confirmed. In August, IS claimed responsibility for a suicide attack that killed 16 people in the city.

Qamishli is under the shared control of the Syrian regime and Kurdish authorities, who have declared zones of "autonomous administration" across parts of north and northeast Syria.

Syrian troops and seasoned Kurdish fighters have coordinated on security in Hasakeh province where IS jihadists have tried to advance, but tensions have built up between the sometimes-rival authorities.

Defence

In a leafy field in Syria, fighters in beige fatigues negotiate an obstacle course as they are trained to defend a Kurdish federal region across the country's north. Clutching rifles under a bright spring sun, the men are among thousands undergoing obligatory nine-month training to join the Autonomous Protection Forces.

The APF, its commander-in-chief Renas Roza says, will be responsible for defending the federal region declared last month at a Kurdish-led conference. "This is the nucleus of a new army that will take up the defence of the federal region in northern Syria," Roza tells AFP in his headquarters at Amuda near the border with Turkey. The clean-shaven commander sits under a large poster bearing the APF logo a long, curved sword crossed over a rifle below a red five-point star.

Roza says thousands of Kurdish, Arab and Syriac Christian men between the ages of 18 and 30 have completed the compulsory training. For the first two months, conscripts are taught military structure and tactics, and then have lessons on human rights and interaction with civilians.

Three stages of training are led by the powerful People's Protection Units (YPG), the military arm of the leading Kurdish Democratic Union Party (PYD).

Fadi Abdo Lahdo, a Syriac fighter training in the Bawr camp near Rmeilan, says his trainers are from the YPG's commando force.

Dealing with civilians

"We're learning how to cross over both cement barriers and natural barriers," says the fair-haired fighter, squinting in the sunlight. Other training sessions are administered by civic institutions. "I served five months and I still have four months before I finish my service," says Rinas Ahmad, an 18-year-old conscript with gelled hair. "We were trained on military life and on how to deal with civilians so we don't become like the Syrian (government) army," Ahmad says.

Syria's Kurds have both exploited and benefited from the chaos of the five-year-war to expand their control across northern parts of the country.

When the regime's armed forces withdrew from Kurdish-majority areas in 2012, Kurds filled the void with a system of three "autonomous administrations".

The three cantons, known from west to east as Afrin, Kobane and Jazire, already feature their own independent police forces, driving licences and schools. In March, a Kurdish-led summit in Rmeilan announced that it would establish a "federal region" uniting the cantons. It elected a 31-member assembly tasked with laying the groundwork for the federal region by September.

The announcement was swiftly shot down by both the mainstream opposition and the regime, which categorically reject a federal system for Syria.

Rounding up recruits

In anti-government demonstrations across the country, some protesters burned the Kurdish flag to show their opposition to federalism. Syria's Kurds have continued their preparations nevertheless.

Training camps currently operate in the Afrin and Jazire cantons and will open soon in Kobane, Roza says. The APF is also rounding up anyone who has yet to complete his nine-month service.

"We check people's papers as they pass through checkpoints. If they have not done the training, we take them there," an APF spokesman says.

An Arab APF trainee, who spoke on condition of anonymity, says he was detained at a Kurdish-run checkpoint as he drove to work. Non-Kurdish residents living under the PYD-run cantons were already complaining about a six-month period of compulsory military service run by the YPG, but the new training period is three months longer. As the federal region's future army, APF units have begun deploying to areas recently captured from the Islamic State jihadist group. Although they are not yet involved in front-line fighting, they are increasingly cooperating with the YPG and the Kurdish-Arab Syrian Democratic Forces. The APF moves in to secure towns that the YPG or the SDF have seized from IS-such as Shadadi in Hasakeh province, which the SDF captured in February.

Kurdish forces have led the fight against IS since the jihadist group emerged in Syria in 2013, scoring several major victories in the recapture of key border towns, like Kobane, last year. - AFP