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This article says Derbassiyeh is in the East of Syria, as well as in the North East of Syria. A town cannot be in two different places and since Wikipedia does not have an article under that place name, I am curious about where it actually is. Is there an alternative name for this place? This report says "Derbassiyeh" is a Kurdish-controlled town in northeastern Syria. And this report from the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights says "Derbassiyeh" is a border town with Turkey and a road connects the town to a place called "Amuda". Although this diagram from the UN OHCR shows "Derbassiyeh" as a border crossing town opposite Şenyurt in Turkey, and another report from the UN OHCR indicates "Derbassiyeh" is a district north of Al Hasaketh, the accompanying map shows the name as Ad Darbisyeh. So I am wondering if "Derbassiyeh" is also known as Al-Dirbasiyah? - Cameron Dewe (talk) 04:51, 21 October 2023 (UTC)[reply]
After writing the above, I came across a later report: "Lives of citizen journalist and activist in danger". RSF news (rsf.org). Reporters Without Borders. 3 April 2012. - which says that "Derbassiyeh" is a town north of the eastern city of Al-Hassakeh.
I also note that place names in the Assyrian and Kurdish regions of Syria have been renamed into Arabic. Thus "Ad Darbasiyah" becomes Al-Dirbasiyah. Other names for this location I have found include Derbassiye, and Darbasiyah.
I was curious about why the Reporters Without Borders organisation names the subject of this article as Jawan Mohamed Qatna while the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, and this Wikipedia article, calls him Jawan Mohammed Qatna, using two 'm's instead of one. Is this an English translation issue? Digging for further information, I came up with these additional reports that suggest this article needs more diversity in its sources.
This report: "Syria: A Kurdish Newroz and a Syrian Spring". Bulletin (Institutkurde.org). No. 324. Fondation-Institut kurde de Paris. March 2012. - calls the subject "Ciwan Khalaf Mohammad al-Qatna", or "Ciwan Khalaf" for short.
This report: Amer Abdul Salam (26 March 2012). "Body of Syrian Kurdish activist found three hours after abduction". Ekurd Daily (ekurd.net). New York, NY: Ekurd Daily (Kurd Net group). AK News. Web page title: Body of Syrian Kurdish activist and Tammo's newphew found three hours after abduction - says the subject's name was "Khalaf Mohammed al-Qatna" and that he was known as "Joan".
However, UN sources prefer to use "Jawan Mohammed Qatna". Observatory of Killed Journalists. UNESCO.
Having gone through this exercise I can understand why the article uses the most commonly recognizable name, "Jawan Mohammed Qatna", rather than others that appear in some sources. Even so, I think the article needs to at least mention the alternative names and include these additional sources. - Cameron Dewe (talk) 11:35, 21 October 2023 (UTC)[reply]