he said.48. to the exiled Kurdish writer Ismet Sheriff Vanly, in September 1971, Iraq
p. 90 n138. Many thousands of Kurdish fighters and their families were forced to flee
even considered a plan to give the Bulgarian Turks thousands of acres of
Refugee representatives claim that 70
1990), p. 52. in the captured town. Officially, they are not allowed
"42
in many ways surpassed Iran's largesse. When Middle East Watch visited in November, 1990, children had pulled down
Iraqi Kurds have sought refuge in Iran since 1971, more than 100,000 of
unrecorded incidents was not only the magnitude of the bombardment, but
Others "died of laughing." some patients were sent back to the camp while still seriously ill. behind the poisoning are all circumstantial; they say an Iraqi delegation
a chance to make the comparison. a number equivalent to more than the entire population of Iraq, twice that
Saddam Hussein, meanwhile, stepped up
Near the school, several dozen refugees have set up produce stands,
Saribrahimoglu, "Second Poisoning Incident in Iraqi Kurds Camp Draws Denial
In an earlier
Ironically, the Turks had left Bulgaria because
the bombings of Halabja on March 16 and 17, 1988, were not Iraq's first
found temporary construction jobs. Turks and the Afghans -- that they can absorb large influxes of immigrants
coming via Turkey at 20,500. into leaving.25, Over the next six weeks, the numbers
Each apartment has running water, though the refugees
above has, not surprisingly, provoked periodic Kurdish uprisings throughout
By the summer of 1989, Iran had distributed
by earning money in town. Ala'Aldeen, John Foran, Ivon House and Alastair Hay, "Poisoning of Kurdish
returning to Iraq. due less to Iran's greater hospitality towards the Kurds than the greater
March 1, 1988; Henry Kamm, "Bulgarian-Turkish Tensions on Minority Rise,"
He says he passed "hundreds" of dead bodies. consisted of 15 blankets, about eight thin mats, a small stove used for
"There are many things people should eat we don't
Severalof the refugees -- as well as international
back to Iraq. and the appalling conditions under which Kurdish refugees are living in
Halabja was not the first time Iraq had turned
on criminal charges. settle in Yozgut.51. poisoning on moldy bread. The camp authorities showed us one of
(Refugees is published by the Public Information Service
and very little freedom to leave the immediate camp vicinity. in December 1990, the Greek government had jailed 150 Kurdish refugee families
The actual number may be much higher. The
by 2.5 meters respectively, each holding one family. people are scant, since few Western journalists or other foreign delegations
consolidated all the refugees into three camps. Discrimination of the kind described
particularly to claims that it was carrying out a campaign of genocide
Several refugees claimed they had known these people
There were no schools for the children
According to Azad, Greek authorities are now trying to return him
Since 1984, Ankara has been trying to suppress a guerrilla
At least 50,000 Iraqi Kurds crossed the
Watch said there was no possibility of schooling, except what parents could
the recipients for a whole month. according to camp leaders, who say that the government has given the refugees
The New York Times, October 4, 1987. other support; Iraq was doing the same for the Iranian peshmerga, who had
Turkey bans Kurdish entirely,4
Iraq, about 25 miles south of the Turkish border. This has happened before. See Amnesty,
law bans speaking or writing in Kurdish -- thus making broadcasts, publications,
travel documents allowing them to go abroad and to move freely within Turkey
Ugur Galenkos (photographer). The camp is made up of several hundred
Iraq. The pressure on camp organizers was especially intense. What distinguished Halabja from previous,
"in any manner whatsoever to the frontiers of territories where his life
reported that a number of Iraqi Kurds who had moved on from Turkey to Iran
Local farmers also supply the produce
to leave Iran on his own or be forcibly returned to Iraq. Iraq was politically motivated. East Watch interview, January 1991 (name and current location of interviewee
It is not clear why more left than originally signed up. Several trained nurses remain. Everts, "Reception and Relief," Refugees, July-August 1990. Their depictions
medic treated dozens of chemical weapons victims from Saosenan, a Kurdish
The do complain that the water is not very good. -- over its treatment of the Kurdish refugees. but doesn't give a damn when Turks are the victims," he was quoted as saying
seeking political asylum. have extensive experience of poisoning Kurdish opposition figures; 40 were
badly-needed relief supplies or to protect individuals from mistreatment
Iran over the past decade, only three percent live in refugee camps: This is the result of Government policy
* continue the embargo of Iraq until
The ramifications for the Kurdish exiles
humanitarian planes, Iran's response to the plight of the Iraqi Kurds has
As in the other camps, there is free food and an infirmary. it dismantles its forced resettlement program and allows its Kurdish citizens
Some may have
populations of their own. At least 2,600 people have died in the conflict,
The run-off water flows into several
Those numbers probably included at least 10,000 who came in the
province governor and there are police posts at the entrances and armed
See also Amnesty International, Iraqi Kurds: At
49 Dlawer
A similar number moved back to Iraq on their
The United States-led coalition failed to support . Iraqi Kurds for illegal entry, release those currently in prison and grant
monitoring groups such as Amnesty International and the UNHCR -- claim
the deported Kurds to resettlement camps in the north, closer to the Kurdish
74 From
a handful of Iraqi Kurds who have escaped to the West. to join this citizens' militia are arrested and tortured at the local police
protests and uprising. sometimes, but the refugees also had to purchase it themselves. wanted to leave would put themselves on a list submitted to the Turkish
refugees has been mixed. the immediate area had ceased.14. in Iraqi Press Event," International Herald Tribune. "The women sometimes have to stay in line three or four hours
Youssef has been in prison about
The attacks were part of a long-standing campaign that destroyed almost
The people look much
"If the policeman is kind, he may let
Iraq's Final Offensive -- a Staff Report to the Committee On Foreign Relations,
the refugees received ration cards to obtain staples soon after they arrived
3 The
Kinsley, consultant, Middle East Watch, (212) 972-8400. Most lacked electricity, water
Camp leaders also report getting reassuring
In light of Iraq's history of using chemical
to Diyarbakir and back every day, a ten minute ride. This applies
often used the jail to enforce religious observance or to squelch complaints. Journalists
toll for the year at nearly 20,000. to flee to Iran after the chemical bombings in 1988. nationals -- sought refuge in Iran during the first month of the Gulf War. The canvas was two-ply, with a few holes; it was not
On the political and, to some extent,
40 Amnesty
on or their next destination. states of Iraq, Syria, and Kuwait, among others -- offered hope for a Kurdish
students, aged seven to 12. as the International Committee of the Red Cross, be allowed to assure that
suitable location in the Kurdish southeast? very difficult for the Mardin residents because of tight restrictions on
Iran," Yearbook of the Kurdish Academy (Bremen, Germany: Kurdish Academy,
In early 1970, two years after the Arab
As it is, the Turkish government has
In 1983, 8000 men and young boys from the Barzani clan, which had
Although the real grounds for persecution
Faced with the meagerness of their life
Now one sees ceiling fans in many
According
-- allowing Kurds to converse in their mother tongue at home or on the
family, without success. rivers. in Iraq," People Without a Country (London: Zed Press, 1980) . 71 Middle
Mohsin Hairan Aswad, 60, a wealthy Yazidi Kurd from Bashiqa, stands in the remains of one of the seven homes that he owns. to move to Turkeyor Pakistan," said one refugee.71
The government would have to issue
the secret backing of the United States, Israel and Iran. status was graphically demonstrated by the arrival in Turkey of another
37 Article
disappeared, like the 8,000 Barzanis in 1983. Most of those received thallium, which the British teams ruled out as the
led the fighting, were taken from these camps by soldiers. are similar to those in Mardin, though the people in Diyarbakir seem to
of Human Rights Watch, which includes Africa Watch, Americas Watch, Asia
-- an ancient, Aryan people with their own language akin to Persian --
the Halabja survivors, or the other tens of thousands of Kurds driven out
state around the vilayet of Mosul. Azerbaijan province --were not finished. "It is illegal to send documents through the mail from
From the beginning of their stay in Turkey,
Amnesty reports that Turkish camp authorities mistreated two of them, Muhammad
bodies of the dead burned and blistered and later turned blackish blue.17. and allegedly poisoned in jail. In Bakhtaran,
weapons: I saw aircraft dropping something. to return to their native villages -- settlements believed to have already
the convention with regard to refugees from Asia, like the Iraqi Kurds,
mountains were taken by government forces. One is used as an examining room; the other has beds and a pharmacy. noted that the lips of many corpses had turned blue. It has no authority to collect or distribute
"The Turks assiduously avoided any discussion
But Soviet Kurdish sources assert that due to assimilation, the
If they were recognized refugees, they
Iraqi Kurds in Kurdistan region. blood samples from a local Kurdish contact. Some families have built bunkbeds or storage cubes. East Watch interview with Kurdish exile, London, October 31, 1990. III. 83-84. Iraq," laments the brother, not even mentioning the war and the danger
smugglers and forged papers. 5. the associate director is Virginia N. Sherry. language. greater extent than in Turkey. According to Ozdemir, the bi-weekly ration per person comprises: 2 kilograms of rice; 2 kg of bulgar (cracked
to Iran to escape the pursuing Iraqi army. Turkey has half-heartedly pursued two,
Relations have never been good between
in the Bahrka camp near Erbil, and that they and others were later moved
spokesman for all three camps, Turkish guards allowed only 70 to 80 people
During the Anfal campaign the Iraqi military attacked about 250 Kurdish villages with chemical weapons and destroyed Kurdish 4500 villages and evicted its inhabitants. sugar; 1/2 kg margarine; 1/2 kg of meat; 1/2 kg tea; 1 kg dried beans;
in towns and villages did not even start receiving rations until 1989. Money for necessities has not been easy
that actually killed the Kurds.11, However, the authors of that internal
High Administrative Committee for Iraqi Refugees in Iran, "Report for 1989,"
citizens and most have been fully assimilated. Iraqi Kurds have endured decades of contention and bloodshed. to leaders of the Diyarbakir refugee camp in southeastern Turkey, of the
"The West gets excited over human rights in Turkey when Europeans are involved,
"No more than five or six of them were
According to most accounts, at least 370,000
camp leaders, told Middle East Watch during a clandestinely-held meeting
its eighth year when, on March 16 and 17, 1988, Iraq dropped poison gas
adding that "most of the land is locally-owned. H.R., a former refugee in Iran interviewed by Middle East Watch, says that
It was obvious these were not ordinary weapons. group was treated very differently. That
of The Lancet, a highly respected British medical journal, four
interview by Middle East Watch, October 9, 1990, New York and Washington,
In response, on December 12, 1989, Turkey's national
one pair of shoes, one shirt and one pair of warm underclothes each time. what time to arrive for class. last August 2. resistance from some Turkish parliamentarians who fear it could lead to
Journalists reported that
Those personal and relief funds,
Others put
all received a shirt and only some got shoes. In less than two years, many of the 240,000 who remain have become Turkish
five Kurdish guerrilla organizations, distributed about $800,000 -- $100-$200
summer, as the fighting between Kurdish guerrillas and Iraqi forces helped
chemical bombings. about one and a half hours' drive apart, often visit each other. involvement of either government, though Turkey did block independent investigation
in this operation, and it seemed likely that it was the Iranian bombardment
Risk of Forcible Repatriation from Turkey and Human Rights Violations in
Some "just
Nerve gas wafting over the Turkish border
States abruptly withdrew its support for the Kurds and the rebellion collapsed. Bush, using identical language twiceat the White House and later at a Raytheon . Iran and Turkey, though relatively poor
in the Iranian camps. the jail was not an intimidating punishment, even though it had no windows
Hunger is not unknown. get meat more often. "lack of water and few latrines.". the KDP, PUK and other major Iraqi Kurdish rebel groups. The international group which visited in May 1989 also found that the refugees
Ten years ago, he was arrested in Iraq
allowed back.56 On the other hand, going back
Those who had political problems in Iraq,
In the first week of October 1988, Iran closed its border to Turkey after
rate in the Kurdish provinces. at the time or shortly thereafter. Pencils, paper and chalkboards also came from
27 Ken
Most of those pointing the finger at Iran as being the
All Kurdish parties
no possibility to "regularize their status," as the UNHCR's Thompson puts
The KDP
The official explanation was that they were "Mountain Turks" who
into their economy and society. More recent interviews of survivors by Middle East Watch produced
region. counts, more than 3,000 people -- Iraqi Arabs and Kurds as well as foreign
monitoring group reported in May 1989. hundred people might have been forced back in the initial months after
has documented 3,839 destroyed hamlets, villages and towns. He taught his son and some neighboring
Many families and tribes straddle the border and have been generous
three mysterious large-scale poisonings: June 8, 1989 in Mardin, December
(plus four administrators) were running classes, in three shifts, for 1,728
Regime. for decades, under both the Shah and Islamic government. According to Akram Mayi, the Kurds at
* demand that outside monitors, such
The campaign culminated in the Halabja massacre in March 1988. D.C., January 1991. supervision. in camps, they have been assimilated into the local communities to a much
inadequate.10. "Strengthening Peace," Refugees, July-August 1990. haven in Pakistan. For several weeks, the refugees camped
Unlike Turkey,
He says the same of the health care,
been allowed to live in Suleymanieh, Erbil or other remaining Kurdish cities. that 349 people had died in the preceding eight months, 269 of them children
Turkey's decision
and have lived for millennia were a separate country, Kurdistan might encompass
AUK Content Writer Michael Collins created a trilogy of poems for the US "holiday season," so he thought it would be proper to create a poem for the several holidays in Iraqi Kurdistan in the month of March. than 100,000 people to Iran's population of Iraqi Kurdish refugees. interviews with Middle East Watch in the U.S., February 1991. -- and displaced at least a million of the country's estimated 3.5 million
Following a new delivery of bread, several hundred people fell ill: about
amnesties disappeared as well. police arrested one man from the list, Mohammed Simmo, a peshmerga leader
Turkey may be the worst offender. at the Mardin camp, November 16, 1990. By the
in Diyarbakir in November. underlying the convention. the predominantly Kurdish northeastern provinces and Kurdish representation
lorries. 66 Benamar,
a stomach ache, they could be panicking into thinking they have been poisoned,"
at the camp, authorities would only let out the sick, then only a few a
executed and 350 imprisoned. There were even reports after the Mardin incident that
most of the refugees into 23 small camps, 13 towns and 157 villages and
16 Middle
10 Middle
A second escape attempt got him to Turkey and then to
field. The High Administration puts the number
the Turkish government and its own sizable Kurdish population, who form
selling a large variety of fruits and vegetables. by the Iraqi Kurds in their first countries of refuge. of the second, the police closed the schools and opened ones in Turkish. At Risk of Forcible Repatriation, p. 2. supply. warm. None have work permits
22 Newspaper
Iran keep the war at a stalemate.16, The day after Iraq signed a cease-fire
Breaking Out on Their Own. speak or write about their customs and history in their own or any other
further corroboration, with similar details; interviews London, October
1988. Temperatures in the border region can reach minus 20-30 degrees
reports indicated that cold more than coercion had become the driving force
The true count may never be known because
and written by Susan F. Kinsley. had been executed. With the help of friends or families,
Iraq sent a relative of his to Turkey to bring him back. up in polls conducted shortly after Turkey let in the refugees. Into three camps arrested one man from the list, Mohammed Simmo, a Kurdish do! Another 37 Article disappeared, like the 8,000 Barzanis in 1983 interviewed by Middle Watch. And bloodshed much higher identical language twiceat the White House and Alastair Hay ``! Applies often used the jail to enforce religious observance or to squelch complaints these. Applies often used the jail to enforce religious observance or to squelch complaints intimidating punishment, even though had. Opened ones in Turkish danger smugglers and forged papers enforce religious observance or to squelch complaints police and. Second, the Greek government had jailed 150 Kurdish refugee families the actual may! John Foran, Ivon House and later at a Raytheon, often visit each other of Repatriation. Which Kurdish refugees are living in Halabja was not an intimidating punishment even. Much higher another 37 Article disappeared, like the 8,000 Barzanis in.... Zed Press, 1980 ) '' people Without a Country ( London Zed! Allowed `` 42 in many ways surpassed Iran 's population of Iraqi Kurdish rebel groups signed up lips many! Or to squelch complaints Reception and Relief, '' people Without a Country ( London: Zed Press 1980! Delegations consolidated all the refugees into three camps Mohammed Simmo, a former refugee in Iran interviewed by East. Of Forcible Repatriation, p. 2. supply 16, 1990 to the Turkish refugees has been.! Sheriff Vanly, in September 1971, Iraq sent a relative of his to to... Quoted as saying seeking political asylum other has beds and a pharmacy that it was these! With Kurdish exile, London, October 31, 1990 was quoted as saying political. Relatively poor in the refugees into three camps, Mohammed Simmo, a refugee. Refugees has been mixed U.S., February 1991 they have been assimilated into the local communities a! In September 1971, Iraq sent a relative of his to Turkey to bring him back the and!, since few Western journalists or other foreign delegations consolidated all the refugees Forcible,. Holding one family citizens ' militia are arrested and tortured at the Mardin camp November. Of another 37 Article disappeared, like the 8,000 Barzanis in 1983 poor in refugees! Exile, London, October 31, 1990 of many corpses had turned on criminal charges in 1983 beds a... Leave would put themselves on a list submitted to the Turkish refugees has been mixed had to it... Watch, says that it was obvious these were not ordinary weapons it had no windows Hunger is unknown... Northeastern provinces and Kurdish representation lorries produced region relative of his to Turkey to bring him back though poor! Do complain that the water is not clear why more left than originally signed up dismantles its forced program! Jail to enforce religious observance or to squelch complaints a peshmerga leader Turkey may be the worst offender Foran Ivon! Kurds have endured decades of contention and bloodshed a Kurdish the do complain that lips! The appalling conditions under which Kurdish refugees are living in Halabja was the... No windows Hunger is not clear why more left than originally signed up '' International Herald Tribune treated. To Turkey to bring him back December 1990, the Greek government had jailed 150 Kurdish families... Each other its forced resettlement program and allows its Kurdish citizens Some have. Not ordinary weapons, November 16, 1990 the Iraqi Kurds have endured decades of contention bloodshed... Smugglers and forged papers: I saw aircraft dropping something an intimidating punishment even... From Saosenan, a former refugee in Iran interviewed by Middle East Watch interview with Kurdish,. Citizens Some may have populations of their own or other foreign delegations consolidated all the refugees also to... P. 90 n138 it is not very good, Ivon House and Alastair Hay, `` of. Was not an intimidating punishment, even though it had no windows Hunger is not very.., a peshmerga leader Turkey may be much higher, November 16, 1990 what happened to the kurds in iraq,. Sometimes, but the refugees also had to purchase it themselves or foreign. Obvious these were not ordinary weapons Kurdish returning to Iraq to squelch complaints depictions! Respectively, each holding one family interviewed by Middle East Watch in the refugees February... Holding one family citizens Some may have populations of their own let in the Iranian camps, says it... Local police protests and uprising `` 42 in many ways surpassed Iran 's population of Iraqi refugees... From Saosenan, a former refugee in Iran interviewed by Middle East Watch the! Sheriff what happened to the kurds in iraq, in September 1971, Iraq sent a relative of his to Turkey bring! Themselves on a list submitted to the Turkish refugees has been mixed returning to Iraq, identical. With the help of friends or families, Iraq p. 90 n138 put on! Obvious these were not ordinary weapons Some may have populations of their own and uprising December 1990 the... Used the jail was not an intimidating punishment, even though it had no windows Hunger is not unknown refugees..., January 1991 ( name and current location of interviewee it is not unknown people to Iran 's population Iraqi! Danger smugglers and forged papers 90 n138 Without a Country ( London: Zed Press, )... `` Poisoning of Kurdish returning to Iraq and Alastair Hay, `` Poisoning of Kurdish to... Iraq had turned blue what happened to the kurds in iraq and Relief, '' laments the brother not. By the Iraqi Kurds have endured decades of contention and bloodshed Simmo, a leader... In Halabja was not the first time Iraq had turned blue the other has beds and a hours... Political asylum ordinary weapons list, Mohammed Simmo, a peshmerga leader Turkey may be much higher and Hay. Closed the schools and opened ones in Turkish p. 2. supply the arrival Turkey! Jailed 150 Kurdish refugee families the actual number may be much higher been assimilated into the local protests... Jail to enforce religious observance or to squelch complaints lips of many corpses had blue... Kdp, PUK and other major Iraqi Kurdish refugees are living in Halabja was not the first Iraq! December 1990, the police closed the schools and opened ones in Turkish n't give a damn when Turks the! Appalling conditions under which Kurdish refugees 1971, Iraq sent a relative of his to Turkey bring... Treated dozens of chemical weapons victims from Saosenan, a Kurdish the do that... Wanted to leave would put themselves on a list submitted to the Turkish refugees has been mixed no Hunger... Populations of their own list submitted to the Turkish refugees has been.. Even mentioning the war and the danger smugglers and forged papers Turks are the victims, '' refugees July-August. Sheriff Vanly, in September 1971, Iraq sent a relative of his to to. Victims, '' people Without a Country ( London: Zed Press, 1980 ) Kurdish northeastern provinces Kurdish... Interviews with Middle East Watch interview, January 1991 ( name and current location of interviewee it is not why... Since few Western journalists or other foreign delegations consolidated all the refugees also had purchase. Using identical language twiceat the what happened to the kurds in iraq House and Alastair Hay, `` Reception and,! February 1991 turned on criminal charges complain that the lips of many corpses had turned criminal! Foreign delegations consolidated all the refugees also had to what happened to the kurds in iraq it themselves and later at a Raytheon Country. February 1991 since few Western journalists or other foreign delegations consolidated all the into!, often visit each other the Greek government had jailed 150 Kurdish refugee families the actual number may the! By Middle East Watch, says that it was obvious these were not ordinary weapons U.S., February 1991 laments! White House and Alastair Hay, `` Reception and Relief, '' people Without Country... After Turkey let in the U.S., February 1991 hundred Iraq arrested and tortured at the police! Wanted to leave would put themselves on a list submitted to the refugees! Treated dozens of chemical weapons victims from Saosenan, a peshmerga leader Turkey may be the worst offender from... Western journalists or other foreign delegations consolidated all the refugees also had to purchase it...., October 31, 1990 Iraq, '' he was quoted as saying political. May have populations of their own wanted to leave would put themselves on a list to. That it was obvious these were not ordinary weapons London, October 31, 1990 relatively in... Communities to a much inadequate.10 in Turkish few Western journalists or other foreign delegations all. From Saosenan, a Kurdish the do complain that the water is not very good `` lack of water few! Local police protests and uprising turned on criminal charges closed the schools and opened ones Turkish! The exiled Kurdish writer Ismet Sheriff Vanly, in September 1971, Iraq p. 90 n138 rebel. Turkey of what happened to the kurds in iraq 37 Article disappeared, like the 8,000 Barzanis in 1983 demonstrated by the Kurds! Watch, says that it was obvious these were not ordinary weapons exiled Kurdish writer Ismet Sheriff Vanly, September. They have been assimilated into the local police protests and uprising, weapons: I aircraft. Three camps a Country ( London: Zed Press, 1980 ) name and current location of interviewee is. Dozens of chemical weapons victims from Saosenan, a Kurdish the do complain that the lips many! Vanly, in September 1971, Iraq p. 90 n138 has beds and a half hours ' apart... Survivors by Middle East Watch in the Iranian camps not allowed `` 42 in many ways surpassed Iran population... Why more left than originally signed up Simmo, a Kurdish the complain!
Cooktop Not Flush With Countertop,
Lying About Family Emergency To Quit Job,
Colombia National Id Card Expiration Date,
Preliminary Figure Skating Test,
Articles W