Kurds, Syria government agree prisoner swap after clashes
A ceasefire was agreeed after Kurdish fighters fought government troops in northeast Syria, with an undisclosed number of prisoners swapped
Fighters take part in an obligatory nine-month training to join the Autonomous Protection Forces (APF) at a training camp in the northern Syrian town of Rmeilane on 24 March 2016 (AFP)
Published date: 25 April 2016 09:31 BST
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Last update: 8 years 7 months ago
Syrian government officials and Kurdish representatives agreed on Sunday to swap prisoners as they seek to maintain a truce that ended days of fighting in the northeastern city of Qamishli, security sources said.
The deadly clashes last week marked a rare outbreak of violence between Kurdish forces and pro-government fighters in Qamishli, where control is split between Kurdish militia and the Syrian army and its allies.
The two sides agreed to an indefinite ceasefire on Friday but tensions have remained.
"An agreement was reached after midnight to bring calm back to Qamishli involving an exchange of prisoners between both sides," a Kurdish security source told AFP on Sunday.
A government security source confirmed a deal was struck during a meeting at the mainly Kurdish city's airport between government officials and representatives of the Kurdish People's Protection Units (YPG).
"It was agreed to keep Friday's truce in place" with "the exchange of those captured and injured starting Sunday," the government source said.
The fighting began on Wednesday with a scuffle at a checkpoint and according to Kurdish security forces, killed 17 civilians, 10 Kurdish fighters and 31 government troops and allied militiamen.
The Kurdish security forces said they had arrested 102 soldiers and pro-government fighters since the beginning of the fighting.
The deal reached on Sunday, according to the Kurdish source, would also see the government free Kurds held in their prisons since before 2011.
Kurds will keep the positions they seized during the clashes, including a prison, the source said.
The sources could not say how many prisoners would be involved in the swap.
Both sides said they would keep channels of communication open to come to an agreement on additional points, including a potential reduced presence for pro-government militias in Qamishli.
The army and its militia ally, the National Defence Forces, control Qamishli airport and parts of the city, as well as parts of the provincial capital Hasakeh to the south.
Nearly all of the rest of the province is controlled by the YPG, who have declared an autonomous region across the mainly Kurdish northern areas they control.
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