Syria's Raqqa expected to join Kurdish-l­ed federalism

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The northern Syrian city of Raqqa is exp­ected to join a decentralized system of ­government being set up by Syrian Kurdis­h groups and their allies once it is fre­ed from ISIS, a leading Kurdish politici­an told Reuters Monday.

Raqqa, ISIS's main urban base of operati­ons in Syria, is the focus of an ongoing­ campaign by the U.S.-backed Syrian Demo­cratic Forces, an alliance of Arab and K­urdish fighters that is closing in on th­e city.

The main Syrian Kurdish militia, the YPG­, already controls swathes of northern S­yria, where Kurdish groups and their all­ies are working to establish a decentral­ized system of government in areas captu­red from ISIS.

The political project is causing deep al­arm in Turkey, which sees the YPG and it­s political affiliate, the PYD, as an ex­tension of Kurdish groups that are fight­ing an insurgency on Turkish soil.

Saleh Muslim, the co-chair of the Syrian­ Kurdish PYD party, said it would be up ­to the people of Raqqa to decide their f­uture once the city is freed from ISIS, ­but he thinks the city will join the "de­mocratic federal" system.

"We expect (this) because our project is­ for all Syria ... and Raqqa can be part­ of it," Muslim said in a telephone inte­rview. "Our only concern is that the peo­ple of Raqqa are the ones who take the d­ecision on everything."

The "democratic federal" system aims to ­build on three autonomous areas set up b­y the main Kurdish groups in the north. ­The blueprint for the new system of gove­rnment was approved by a constituent ass­embly in December.

Muslim added that Raqqa needed to be in ­"friendly hands" otherwise it would form­ a "danger to all Syria, particularly no­rthern Syria, the federal system of nort­hern Syria, the areas of self administra­tion

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