Monitoring Committee-elect hold its first meeting in Syria’s northeastern Hasakah
HASAKAH, Syria (North Press) – The Monitoring Committee elected by the Autonomous Administration in North and East Syria (AANES) to implement the outputs of the National Conference for the people of Jazira and Euphrates held its first meeting Monday in the city of Hasakah, with the presence of General Mazloum Abdi, Commander-in-Chief of the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF).
Abd Hamid al-Mehbash, co-chair of the Executive Council of AANES, told North Press that the Monitoring Committee to implement the outputs of the National Conference for the people of Jazira and Euphrates reached a mechanism to follow up its work.
He added, “During their meeting, the committee members reached the formation of three sub-committees to follow up on security, administrative and economic issues in areas of AANES.
This meeting is considered the first to be held by the committee that emerged from the National Conference of the people of Jazira and Euphrates on November 25 in Hasakah.The committee meeting was attended by 16 members representing the Autonomous and Civil Administration regions.
General Mazloum Abdi, Commander-in-Chief of SDF and Amina Omar, the co-chair of the Syrian Democratic Council (SDC) attended the meeting to ensure the seriousness and the willing to implement the outputs of the conference.
The co-chair of the Executive Council of AANES said, “General Mazloum Abdi really had enough seriousness, persistence, determination and the will to follow up to implement the outcomes of this conference.”
The Commander-in-Chief of SDF had twitted on his formal account on Twitter, “The outputs of the National Conference of the People of Jazirah and Euphrates are the beginning of a new phase in the future of our region.”
Al-Mehbash indicated that the committee will hold monthly meetings periodically to follow up the implementation of the conference’s decisions, and to assess the seriousness of the Autonomous Administration and its implementation of the decisions reached by the conference.
The conference had adopted a package of decisions that included 17 decisions, including administrative, political, economic, social, educational, military and security aspects, and 16 members were elected to follow up the implementation of these decisions.