Skip to main content
Welsh Labour demand Jeremy Hunt supports Kurds

THE Welsh Assembly’s International Relations Minister Eluned Morgan has written to Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt demanding he urgently speaks up for Kurdish rights.

The move comes as Welsh Kurd Imam Sis has spent over four months on hunger strike in Newport and could die at any moment.

Mr Sis is one of thousands of Kurds on hunger strike around the world who are calling for an end to the isolation of jailed Kurdish leader Abdullah Ocalan.

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
Similar stories
A camera on top of a Live Facial Recognition (LFR) van during a demonstration of facial recognition technology by Surrey and Sussex Police at Surrey Police headquarters in Guildford, November 11, 2025
Wales / 27 January 2026
27 January 2026
ETHNIC STRIFE: Women condemn, yesterday, a video in circulation that allegedly shows a fighter affiliated with the Syrian government holding the braid of a Kurdish female fighter after killing her, in Qamishli, northeastern Syria
Middle East / 23 January 2026
23 January 2026

VIJAY PRASHAD details how US support for Syrian President Ahmad al-Sharaa allowed him to break the resistance of the autonomous Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF)

Protesters take part in a demonstration outside the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Offcie (FCDO) in Whitehall, London, calling for the UK Government to protect the crew of Madleen, June 9, 2025
Exclusive / 27 June 2025
27 June 2025
OF LITTLE BENEFIT: All offshore wind farms in the UK are built on seabed leased from the Crown Estate so is Wales largest wind farm Gwynt y Mor where German RWE holds 50 per cent, Stadtwerke Munchen holds 30 per cent, Siemens holds 10 per cent and UK Green Investment Bank holds 10 per cent. Its output is capable of powering 30 per cent of the homes in Wales
Features / 28 June 2025
28 June 2025

JACKIE OWEN and DYLAN LEWIS-ROWLANDS argue that Welsh Labour conference this weekend is the be-all and end-all moment if Labour wants to avoid a rout at next year’s election