| Battle of Qamishli (2016) | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Part of theRojava conflict and theSyrian Civil War | |||||||
Top: Asayish forces during the clashes Bottom: Strategic view of Qamishli, before the clashes occurred | |||||||
| |||||||
| Belligerents | |||||||
| Commanders and leaders | |||||||
(Asayish commander) | Unknown | ||||||
| Casualties and losses | |||||||
| 16 killed[11] | 22–31 killed,[12][7] 80–102 captured[12][10] | ||||||
| 17–23 civilians killed[12] | |||||||
Location within Syria | |||||||
The2016 Battle of Qamishli was a violenturban battle between theAsayish police of theAutonomous Administration of North and East Syria and the pro-Syrian governmentNational Defence Forces in the city ofQamishli,Syria.
On 20 April 2016, National Defence Forces militias attacked an Asayish patrol when Kurdish police failed to stop at a government checkpoint inside the Qamishli District.[13] According to Kurdish sources the NDF killed 2 Asayish members and 2 civilians with sniper fire.[1] Additional clashes then escalated between the two factions, with Asayish forces taking part in the fighting, killing 8 NDF members and arresting others.
The next day, the Asayish encircled government forces in the center of the city, taking over a bakery and the besieged Allaya Prison, with five Asayish fighters being killed.[14][8] 45 NDF militiamen surrendered and several civilians were killed.[15][9] During the battle Asayish forces removed a poster ofBashar al-Assad in captured areas.[8] In response, theSyrian Army shelled the prison and surrounding areas withmortars, killing 4 civilians in the nearby neighborhoods. On the same day, theIslamic State of Iraq and the Levant claimed acar bomb attack that killed and wounded 15 Kurdish fighters in the city.[5] In the evening, the NDF andSootoro reversed some of Asayish's gains and captured two checkpoints, a stadium, and a hospital in the city.[4][16]
An indefinite ceasefire was declared on 22 April. According to the ceasefire agreement, each side will keep the territory under its control. The ceasefire gave the Kurds control of more territory in Northern Syria.[9][7][17]
Nearly two dozen of the captured pro-government fighters were subsequently released under the terms of the ceasefire on 25 April.[18]