Sinjar clashes (2017)

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Date3 March 2017
(1 day)
Location
Result Ceasefire[1]
Sinjar clashes (2017)
Part of the War in Iraq (2013–2017), spillover of the Syrian civil war and the PKK insurgency in Iraqi Kurdistan

Fallow terrace fields in the Sinjar Mountains
Date3 March 2017
(1 day)
Location
Result Ceasefire[1]
Belligerents
Kurdish National Council (KNC)
Supported by:
Kurdistan Democratic Party
Sinjar Resistance Units (YBŞ)
Êzîdxan Women's Units (YJÊ)[2]
PKK[2]
Commanders and leaders
Unknown

Zardasht Shingali[3]
(YBŞ commander)

Rosyar Vejin[4]
(YJÊ commander)
Units involved
Rojava Peshmerga

YBŞ

PKK

Strength
~500 fighters,[1] 30 Humvees (YBŞ claim)[2] Unknown
Casualties and losses
Unknown number killed, ~12 wounded[3] (local reports)
14 killed "dozens" surrendered,[6] 4 captured[7] (pro-PKK claim)
5 killed, 20 wounded,[2][5] 5 captured[8]
2 killed[2][9]
Several civilians killed[1]

The Sinjar clashes of 3 March 2017 occurred between pro-PKK forces, namely the Sinjar Resistance Units (YBŞ) and the Êzîdxan Women's Units (YJÊ), and the Rojava Peshmerga that serve as the Kurdish National Council's paramilitary wing. After KNC forces entered the town of Khanasor in the Iraqi Sinjar Mountains, fighting boke out among unclear circumstances, resulting in dozens of casualties.

The clashes have widely been seen as symptomatic for the high tensions among the forces that fight against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) around Sinjar, and the risk that these tensions could escalate into turf wars, which would degrade any attempts to drive the extremist group from the region for good.[1][3][10]

A YJÊ fighter in 2016. YBŞ and YJÊ were organised and trained by the PKK, resulting in their conflict with the Kurdistan Democratic Party.

When ISIL invaded the Sinjar Mountains in 2014 and began to massacre its Yezidi population, the PKK intervened with hundreds of fighters in order to save the locals from the Islamic State militants. Since then, the PKK set up two local Yezidi self-defense groups, namely the Sinjar Resistance Units and the Êzîdxan Women's Units. In late 2015, anti-ISIL forces finally succeeded in driving the Islamic State mostly from the Sinjar area, but the PKK fighters have since refused to leave and continue to train and equip the local PKK-affiliated militias. This has caused resentment among the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP), which regards Sinjar as part of Iraqi Kurdistan and sees the PKK as local political rival.[3][8]

The KDP believes that the presence of the PKK in Sinjar is illegal, and that their own Peshmerga forces are the only legitimate security force of the area. The Rojava Peshmerga are Syrian Kurdish fighters affiliated with the KNC, which in turn was set up by the KDP, and effectively operate as part of the KDP's regular armed forces.[1][3][8]

History

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