One week after President Bashir al-Assad's regime was toppled the Kurdish region in the north is neither as calm nor as relieved as the rest of Syria.
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00:00Earlier this month, Islamist opposition rebels toppled Al-Assad's regime. Many came out to
00:07the street to celebrate, but Syria's Kurds in the north worry for their future. Many
00:12fear the ascendance of the Turkish-backed Islamist group who overthrew Al-Assad will
00:17make it hard for the Kurds to find a new place in Syria.
00:21We've been here for four years now. The Turkish planes, the drones, and the military
00:28targets. But in the end, we can't focus on anything else. We want to show the people
00:35that we're here.
00:36We've been here for four years now. The Turkish planes, the drones, and the military
00:41targets. But in the end, we can't focus on anything else. We want to show the people
00:46that we're here.
00:47We want to show the people that we're here. But in the end, we can't focus on anything
00:54else. We want to show the people that we're here.
00:58Meanwhile, the Kurdish administration issued amnesty for prisoners to celebrate the fall
01:03of Al-Assad's regime. It comes after the opening of prisons in areas of Syria that were previously
01:08controlled by the government.