
© AFPFighters from the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces in Syria
The Democratic Union Party (PYD), one of the leading Kurdish political forces in Syria, has indicated that it plans to
establish a "democratic autonomous administration" in Manbij, which made headlines last week when
Russia and the United States tried to prevent Turkish-led forces and the Syrian Kurds from clashing over the city.Ewwas Eli, a senior member of the PYD responsible for foreign relations of the party's branch in Kobani, told Sputnik Turkey that the administration has not been created so far, but it will be ready to operate in the near future. "Thirteen people will be in charge of the administration," he said. "I am not aware when the
Autonomous Administration of Manbij is created. I met with the chair of the administration and its members yesterday during my visit to the city. Preliminary activities with regard to declaring autonomy are drawing to a close."
The autonomous administration will be reportedly made up of 71 Arabs, 43 Kurds, ten Turkmen, eight Circassians, an Armenian and a Chechen. The new body will be run by a delegation comprising thirteen people, who will have four deputies.Manbij, a strategically-located city in northern Syria, had been
under Daesh's control from January 2014 until August 2016 when the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) pushed the brutal group out of the city following a two-month-long offensive.
The SDF then established the Manbij Military Council to provide security to, and administer, the embattled city,
much to Turkey's discontent.High-ranking Turkish officials, including President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, have repeatedly said that
Manbij will be the next target in the Ankara-led Operation Euphrates Shield, a military operation aimed at pushing Daesh out of northern Syrian and preventing the Kurds from establishing a contiguous autonomous region in the area. In October 2015, the Syrian Kurds declared autonomous rule in Tell Abyad, a city located in the Raqqa province on the border with Turkey.
Comment: Turkey is losing its footing in Northern Syria as the US, Russia and the Kurds seem to have other plans for a transition and way forward. Turkey is adamant against having a Kurdish-dominated territory on its border, with Manbij is a key piece in its OES strategy. There is also the possibility that IS fighting in particular against the Kurds, along with its long-held control in Manbij, has been a cloaked boon to Turkey's self-serving agenda.