East North Syria, danger !

Interview with Patrice Franceschi

Jean-Michel Banquer, former French Minister of Education, with Patrice Franceschi, Khaled Issa and commanders of Christian units of the Syrian Democratic Forces in northeast Syria.

Alain Boinet: Patrice, you’ve just returned from another trip to Northeast Syria. What is the current situation and what are the main issues?

Patrice Franceschi: The situation of the Syrian Democratic Forces – an alliance of Kurds, Christians and anti-Islamist Arabs from the north and east of Syria – is more precarious than ever, unless we deny it. Since the partial abandonment of the Kurds by us Westerners in October 2019 and the subsequent Turkish invasion, the gains of the victorious military campaign against Daech between autumn 2014 and summer 2019 have largely been lost. The then-liberated and unified region – four times the size of Lebanon – has become a shifting mosaic where Russian, American, French, Syrian and Turkish forces intersect, with a growing resurgence of Daech sleeper cells. In short, a big mess, to put it bluntly, instead of a territory totally at peace, as it still was in September 2019…

The Turks are maneuvering everywhere to destabilize the region, advance their pawns and conquer as much territory as possible with the help of their Islamist auxiliaries. The latter are either Syrian mercenaries or Daech jihadists recycled under other names. The Kurds thus face a considerable number of challenges: the “water war” waged by the Turks, who regulate the dams on the Euphrates for their own benefit in order to starve the populations of northern Syria by reducing agricultural production, the regular “droning” of Kurdish civilian and military leaders whenever they move, indiscriminate bombing in the countryside by the Turkish air force, The same applies to specific civilian targets – flour mills, grain silos, power plants, schools, hospitals – an ever-tightening blockade of the tiny border crossing to Iraqi Kurdistan, to reduce the country’s economy to nothing, maneuvers by Turkish and Iranian secret services to incite the Arab tribes of the FDS to rebel, etc. .. The list goes on.

Since June 2021, Turkey has reduced the amount of water in the Euphrates for Syria from 500 m3 second to 214m3 by holding back this water in its upstream dams.

It’s been a long time since I’ve heard Turkish long-range artillery strike at random to terrorize the population. Now it’s a regular occurrence. Especially at night. The town of Amuda, where I regularly stay, has for the first time been deprived of street lighting by the destruction of its power station. Life is becoming very hard and uncertain for the Kurds, Christians and Arabs of the region. This undermines their unity and the confidence they have in their leaders – which is what Ankara is aiming for, as it increases its aggressiveness in proportion to our passivity.

I have also seen for myself that the Turks – and the Iranians, which is new – no longer hesitate to use their drones to bomb the Kurdish forces based in the American camps around Hassaké. This has never happened before. It should be noted that when these bombardments hit camps for displaced Kurds, Western NGOs decide to stop their work and leave the camps, which makes the situation even worse.

As far as the political stakes are concerned, they haven’t changed: the security interests of the Kurds and the West, particularly the French, are as intimately linked as ever in the face of the resurgence of the Turkish-backed Islamic State. These Islamists dream of hitting us again, and as hard as possible. At least, that’s what the hardest jihadist prisoners are saying. At least the Kurds are still willing to keep them at home. It’s up to us to increase our support for the FDS before it’s too late.

Alain Boinet: Jean-Michel Blanquer, the former Minister of Education, accompanied you. What is the significance of his presence with you in north-eastern Syria?

Patrice Franceschi : For months, I had been proposing to a number of prominent French personalities that they accompany me to Syrian Kurdistan, so that I could see the situation at first hand, and then intervene in their sphere of activity to support the Kurds. In the end, all these personalities declined, except Jean-Michel Blanquer. So the three of us left, along with Khaled Issa, the representative in France of the self-administration of northern and eastern Syria – as the region is now called… And since the former minister was going there on his own initiative, the President of the Republic entrusted him with a message of support for the FDS – which we of course passed on to the region’s political and military leaders. Let’s hope that these words will now be followed by deeds.

Along the road to Amuda, abandoned buildings under construction. @Alain Boinet

Alain Boinet: Kurds seem to be under threat in every country in the region. How do you interpret this? Is it a coincidence?

Patrice Franceschi: There’s no such thing as a coincidence. What the Kurds are proposing as a model of society where they have control of a territory, especially in northern Syria, is unbearable for the region’s satraps: democracy, equality between men and women, secularism, respect for minorities… all this is a nightmare for these regimes, from Damascus to Ankara and from Baghdad to Teheran. They fear contagion of this model at home, and are doing everything in their power to destroy it. What’s more, these despots are driven by an ontological contempt for the Kurds, whom they regard and treat everywhere as subhuman, so you can imagine the hatred they harbor.

Alain Boinet: Is the war between Israel and Hamas changing the regional balance? What are the consequences for the FDS? What is the new strategic challenge?

Patrice Franceschi : For the time being, there are no visible consequences. But it’s probably too early to draw any conclusions. Kurdish officials simply note that it is mainly the Iranians who are maneuvering. The Hamas attack on Israel was coordinated with the revolt against the FDS by the Arab tribes of Der-es-Zor on the Euphrates. Iranian intelligence was behind this large-scale revolt. The Kurds discovered this involvement once the revolt had been put down, thanks to the loyalty of the majority of the Arab members of the FDS.

When these same Kurdish leaders observe, moreover, that Erdogan supports Hamas after having supported the Azeris against the Armenians, they say to themselves that the outposts of democracy in the East – in their eyes: Armenia, Kurdistan, Israel – do indeed have the same enemies who are coordinating their efforts in the same timetable to make them all disappear. In their view, it’s time to forge new alliances between these three “indigenous” nations to face up to this challenge.

Alain Boinet: How would you like to conclude this interview?

Patrice Franceschi : The most important thing is to realize that these three conflicts are interconnected, that to be effective we can’t privilege one at the expense of the others, and that we need to fight on all three fronts together. This is what the Kurdish leaders think, and I can only agree with them. Of course, this battle goes beyond humanitarian action, unfortunately, and is being fought on political and military levels alone.

Patrice Franceschi

Writer and humanitarian

Corsican adventurer, political philosopher and French writer – winner of the 2015 Goncourt short story prize – Patrice Franceschi is also an aviator and sailor. He has always divided his life between writing and adventure. He has multiplied his land, air and sea expeditions around the world. He has also led numerous humanitarian missions in war-torn countries, from Bosnia to Somalia, lived among the indigenous peoples of the most remote regions – Papuans, Indians, Pygmies, Nilotics – and spent many years in the ranks of the Afghan resistance fighting the Soviet army. He has also been an active supporter of the Syrian Kurds on the ground since the start of their fight against the Islamic State. His novels, stories, poetry and essays are inseparable from a committed, free and tumultuous existence in which he attempts to “exhaust the field of the possible”. A reserve officer, he also belongs to the prestigious group of naval writers.

 

Find Patrice Franceschi on Défis Humanitaires :

CoCreate Humanity: peer support for the mental health of aid workers

An article by Hélène ROS

CoCreate Humanity founders : Hélène Ros, Sébastien Couturier and Christoph Hensch

CoCreate Humanity (CCH) is a Swiss association that was co-founded in August 2019 in Geneva by Hélène Ros, Sébastien Couturier and Christoph Hensch, three humanitarians from the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC). The association is a community of humanitarian peers that supports suffering aid workers and pays tribute to those who have lost their lives in the exercise of their humanitarian mission, who are or have been injured, kidnapped and imprisoned around the world.

Humanitarians’ mental health is challenged throughout their careers

Humanitarian workers, both local and international, need to be able to heal from traumatic situations and get on with their lives, while maintaining a balance between their humanitarian work and their personal and social lives.

For those who go abroad: working in the humanitarian sector means preparing to leave, adapting to new and difficult living conditions, and preparing to return to an environment that was familiar at the outset, and which will become foreign, abnormal and difficult on their return.

The beneficiaries of CoCreate Humanity’s peer-to-peer support are humanitarians suffering from burnout, compassion fatigue, stress, post-traumatic stress disorder and so on. The initiative is aimed at the younger generation of humanitarians, currently deployed staff, those in career transition, retirees and those left behind in the sector. It is also aimed at humanitarian organizations that do not have the budget to train and care for their staff.

For CoCreate Humanity, the challenge of mental health is threefold: pre-mission, by way of prevention; during the mission; and post-mission, in terms of the care and follow-up of humanitarian personnel.

CoCreate Humanity (CCH) provides a neutral, benevolent space for dialogue, with no ties to the employing organization. This neutral space and the associated services offer aid workers the opportunity to express themselves in confidence, without time constraints, without judgment, and without prejudice to the pursuit of their careers.

CoCreate Humanity dispenses many formations

Peer support is recognized as a real skill that complements the knowledge of mental health professionals. It is being professionalized around the world, with peer-help diplomas and the peer-helper profession already existing in Canada, France and, more recently, Switzerland.

“The peer helper is a member of staff who discloses that he or she is experiencing or has experienced a mental health problem. Sharing his or her experience and recovery story is intended to restore hope, serve as a role model, and offer inspiration, support and information to others in similar situations. The legitimacy of the peer helper’s intervention derives from their experience of the disorder, their experience of care and their recovery journey. Peer support enriches mental health systems with a new type of knowledge: experiential knowledge. This knowledge does not compete with the technical and theoretical knowledge of other professionals working in the field of mental health. It facilitates the establishment of an empathetic relationship based on trust and non-judgment, which encourages commitment to care.” – Nicolas Franck and Caroline Cellard, Pair-aidance en santé mentale – Une entraide professionnalisée, 2020.

CCH peer helping and the qualities required to become a peer helper

The humanitarian peer-helper uses his or her personal experience to develop trusting relationships with humanitarian colleagues. They never give advice, but answer the main questions that humanitarian workers have throughout their careers. This peer-to-peer relationship, with no hierarchical or managerial ties, is a prerequisite for providing a real breathing space.

CoCreate Humanity organizes social events to promote exchange and re-establish social ties, training and skills transfer, and carries out advocacy and memory work through the organization of concerts.

The association organizes two concerts a year: the March concert at the Rosey Concert Hall in Rolle, one of Switzerland’s most prestigious concert halls, and the December Concert du Souvenir to honor the work of humanitarians and pay tribute to those who have disappeared or been injured, kidnapped or imprisoned during their humanitarian missions.

Next Concert du Souvenir in Provins on the 9th December 2023

The choice of December is based on the personal story of Christoph Hensch, who survived the attack on the ICRC hospital in Novye Atagi, Chechnya, on December 17, 1996. An armed commando burst in in the middle of the night to kill as many aid workers as possible. Christoph was shot and left for dead, while six of his colleagues were murdered. The attack was one of the Red Cross movement’s greatest tragedies.

In the future, the association hopes that Geneva, the cradle of humanitarian aid, will become a center for reflection on the mental health and psychosocial well-being of humanitarian workers. CoCreate Humanity hopes to create the first psychosocial rehabilitation center for humanitarian workers in Geneva, following the example of the Athos homes created in 2021 by the French army for psychologically wounded soldiers. France plans to create ten Athos homes by 2030. The system has proved its worth, and should be extended to humanitarian aid workers.

“Human beings have a formidable capacity to rise from anything, even the worst, if they are well supported.” – Dr. Daniel Dufour, former war surgeon and medical coordinator for the ICRC, founder of the OGE method “à l’envers de l’ego”.

Hélène ROS

Hélène was born in Lyon (France) and moved to Switzerland in 2014. She is the eldest of six siblings and the daughter of two survivors of Pol Pot’s genocidal regime.

After graduating from the University of Reims Champagne-Ardenne with a Diplôme d’études universitaires générales (DEUG) in law, she was forced to stop her studies when she wanted to go into international law. She discovered the world of logistics and the workings of international trade “on the job”, in various sectors such as agri-food, international moving and oil. Logistics took her to the headquarters of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) in Geneva in 2015 where she stayed for four years, mainly as executive assistant in private fundraising and humanitarian diplomacy.

Her family history led to her interest in the humanitarian world. First, her father’s meeting with a surgeon from Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), who advised her to immigrate to France for delicate surgery on a gunshot wound to the left arm. Then came the actions of Handicap International, based in Lyon, in the fight against anti-personnel mines in his home country.

The trauma of war, never mentioned within a family, can generate suffering that spans several generations. Children, victims of this “violence of silence”, become collateral damage of the post-traumatic stress disorders suffered by their elders.

By co-founding the association CoCreate Humanity (CCH) with Christoph Hensch and Sébastien Couturier, Hélène wants to emphasize the importance of the duty to remember, of testimonials and of prevention for those who are about to embark on a humanitarian career. Recovery begins with speaking out, listening and simply feeling supported and part of a community.

CoCreate Humanity wants to take up this challenge as a community of peers, and so stay as close as possible to the very essence of humanitarian work: the human being himself.

Join the CoCreate Humanity team on Saturday December 9 at 8.30pm in Provins, 80 kilometers from Paris, to pay tribute to humanitarian workers with the Orchestre à cordes de la Garde républicaine and Julie Sévilla-Fraysse, cellist and CCH Ambassador.