Navigator
Facebook
Search
Ads & Recent Photos
Recent Images
Random images
Welcome To Roj Bash Kurdistan 

Iran awaits 'Kurdish Spring'

A place to post daily news of Kurdistan from valid sources .

Iran awaits 'Kurdish Spring'

PostAuthor: Aslan » Sat Jul 06, 2013 4:44 pm

Erbil, Iraq - Armanj Berxwedan fidgets anxiously in a plastic chair at the centre of a rebel camp in Iraq's Qandil Mountains. A Kalashnikov rifle leans on the tent that doubles as the camp's library and dining hall. The pimply faced, 18-year-old guerrilla from Iran is a member of the Free Life Party of Kurdistan (PJAK), and thinks he could soon be back on the frontlines. It is only a matter of time, he says, until the "Kurdish Spring" reaches his country.

After a century of political exclusion, Kurds are making landmark advances across the Middle East. The Kurds of Syria have built a de-facto autonomous zone in parts of the country's north since the Assad administration pulled back its forces last summer. Talks between Turkey and the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) edge towards a settlement to the bloody conflict there. The Kurds of Iraq boast a federal region that enjoys a semblance of democracy and prosperity.

So far, Iran has bucked the regional trend towards empowerment of the Kurds. Kurdish political activism there is harshly suppressed. Kurds and other nationalities "face multifaceted discrimination, and their legitimate freedoms and rights are frequently transgressed", the UN reports. But gains by their brethren elsewhere in the region are feeding Iranian Kurds' bitterness at their own lack of political status. At the same time, Iranian Kurdish parties see these developments as a landmark opportunity to carve out a new standing for their people.

"We're hopeful that Iran will be forced to give us our rights, too. Let it be like Syrian Kurdistan. They're ruling themselves with their own will," Berxwedan told Al Jazeera. "Why shouldn't it be the same in Iran? This is our expectation. We don't want to fight, but we will if we have to in order to defend Kurdish rights."

Iranian Kurds' most recent chance for freedom came after the Iranian revolution of 1979. Both the liberal nationalist Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan (PDKI) and the Marxist-oriented group Komala backed the uprising against the Shah, taking over swaths of the Kurdish region in the uprising. Tehran regained control following abortive talks and years of bitter fighting. PDKI and Komala fled to Iraqi Kurdistan, where they remain today.

PJAK is now the only Iranian Kurdish group involved in armed struggle against the Islamic Republic. Founded in 2004, it is connected to the Kurdistan Communities Union (KCK), the umbrella body that includes the PKK. Its bases in the Qandil Mountains on the Iraq-Iran border are next to the PKK's. PJAK claims to also control an area spanning 2,200 sq km inside Iran.

Azad Awraz, a member of the PJAK coordination committee, told Al Jazeera changes in the regional order bode well for his organisation's goal of a "democratic Iran and confederal Kurdistan".

"North, south, and west Kurdistan are falling like dominoes. The Kurdish issue is being solved everywhere. Iran has no choice but to do the same," he says.

PJAK welcomed the Turkey-PKK detente as a way to isolate Iran. In 2004, Ankara and Tehran softened their centuries-old rivalry for regional pre-eminence to join forces against PJAK and the PKK. They shared intelligence on rebel movements and coordinated their military operations. Ankara's peace process with the PKK therefore leaves Iran lonely and exposed on the Kurdish front.

"The Iran-Turkey alliance was an obstacle to us. They made war on us a few times," Awraz said. "Now, that won't happen."

PJAK's side of Qandil has been mostly quiet since 2011, when Iraqi Kurdish authorities negotiated a ceasefire with Iran following intense clashes. At a PJAK camp an hour down a dirt road from a village in Iraq's Sulaymaniyah province, fighters spend much of their time reading. Several works by jailed PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan sit on a stuffed bookshelf alongside a Turkish-language copy of The Kurds and Kurdistan by former PDKI president Abdulrahman Qasimlu. Most of the rebels are in their 20s, and about half are women. They come from Iran and Turkey.

On the offensive

The rebels may be tempted to go on the offensive as Iran is strained by the loss of its military alliance with Turkey, its increasingly active involvement in Syria, and domestic troubles exacerbated by harsh international sanctions.

Iran has recently built up its military presence along the borders with Iraq and Turkey, according to Awraz. PJAK foreign affairs spokesman Shamal Bishir told Al Jazeera that that the Kurds had responded in kind: "We will and have increased our [armed] forces inside Iranian Kurdistan. Increasing forces in villages and cities is one of our major goals."

Bishir quickly added that PJAK sought a peaceful solution to the Kurdish issue and prioritised political agitation. Part of this doubtlessly has to do with the fact that the PKK wants to avoid any turmoil that could disrupt its ongoing withdrawal from Turkey as part of the peace process.

"We think it's best for the ceasefire between PJAK and the Iranian state to continue," KCK executive council chairman Murat Karayilan told Al Jazeera. "The Middle East is in a pre-storm period. There's a big possibility that a greater storm will start. It would be more correct if Kurds didn't rush to take up arms against anyone in this period."

Growing KCK influence in Syria and Turkey also presents new political opportunities for PJAK. The rise of the KCK-affiliated Democratic Union Party (PYD) in Syria has strengthened the latter's regional leverage. Meanwhile, the ruling parties in Iraqi Kurdistan - the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) - both have recently cozied up to the PKK as a way of boosting their sagging popularity at home.

Bishir says Iraqi Kurdish authorities are also giving PJAK a fresh look as they prepare for possible developments in Iranian Kurdistan. PJAK decided to buy its own safe house in Sulaymaniyah last summer in order to facilitate these contacts. "We're trying to develop good relations for the coming new period. Soon, eyes will shift from Syria and Turkey to Iran," he says.

Kurdish coalitions

PJAK and other Iranian Kurdish parties see intra-Kurdish strife as a major threat to their improving prospects. They fear a replay of northern Syria, where the PYD has squared off with parties tied to the KDP. The equivalent in Iran would be a showdown between PJAK and the factions claiming the names PDKI and Komala, both of which have long-running ties with Iraqi Kurdish parties.

"If in this atmosphere we go through a time of change and a vacuum, of course, it will be hard to control the situation," Bishir says. "Our goal has been first to establish dialogue and common understanding of each other."

The PDKI split in 2006, while five groups claim the name Komala. Today, the larger PDKI faction, headed by Mustafa Hejri, is based in three desolate camps in northern Iraq. Hejri claims the party has 800 peshmerga - Kurdish guerrillas - but the mostly aging, pot-bellied men would be no match for Iran's Revolutionary Guards.

Hejri's PDKI signed a cooperation accord with a Komala faction last August. He rejects contacts with PJAK, which he sees as a mere extension of the PKK. PDKI last met with the PKK last year, according to Hejri.

Still, Hejri says intra-Kurdish negotiations have taken on greater urgency in recent months. The lessons of 1979 - when internal discord helped Iranian Kurds miss a landmark opportunity - weigh on his mind.

"The Middle East is going to change. When the Islamic Republic came to power, it was very weak, but the Kurdish groups were not aligned with each other. That's why we're negotiating with each other," Hejri tells Al Jazeera.

"Sometimes change occurs speedily. If we're not ready, we'll lose time."

Read comment or join them at:

http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/featur ... 30568.html

Aslan
Tuti
Tuti
 
Posts: 1409
Images: 81
Joined: Mon Sep 10, 2012 5:11 am
Highscores: 0
Arcade winning challenges: 0
Has thanked: 0 time
Been thanked: 757 times
Nationality: Prefer not to say

Iran awaits 'Kurdish Spring'

Sponsor

Sponsor
 

Re: Iran awaits 'Kurdish Spring'

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sat Jul 06, 2013 6:43 pm

One day - HOPEFULLY - Kurds will actually UNITE - stop working in small factions - stop with the "my group is better than your group" attitude - actually work for the benefit of KURDS :o)
Good Thoughts Good Words Good Deeds
User avatar
Anthea
Shaswar
Shaswar
Donator
Donator
 
Posts: 29496
Images: 1155
Joined: Thu Oct 18, 2012 2:13 pm
Location: Sitting in front of computer
Highscores: 3
Arcade winning challenges: 6
Has thanked: 6019 times
Been thanked: 729 times
Nationality: Kurd by heart

Re: Iran awaits 'Kurdish Spring'

PostAuthor: Feyli_kord » Sun Jul 07, 2013 8:32 am

Anthea wrote:One day - HOPEFULLY - Kurds will actually UNITE - stop working in small factions - stop with the "my group is better than your group" attitude - actually work for the benefit of KURDS :o)


Not going to happen anytime soon, one faction has to incorporate all other factions before that is even remotely possible. Even the two major parties in southern kurdistan, have major in-fighting. The only way is to politically unify the entire kurdistan, which is a difficult task. I think parts of kurdistan, we'll never be able to get back, because we're landlocked and supply routes would be easy to cut. We'll have to ally with Iran or turkey, against all other states. And that will of course not only be unlikely thing to happen, even if we did gain such support, we'd have to gurantee that no part of the kurdistan that is located in their territorial state cedes to a unified kurdistan.

Feyli_kord
Ashna
Ashna
 
Posts: 425
Joined: Thu Dec 20, 2007 1:47 pm
Highscores: 0
Arcade winning challenges: 0
Has thanked: 15 times
Been thanked: 87 times

Re: Iran awaits 'Kurdish Spring'

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sun Jul 07, 2013 12:36 pm

Feyli_kord wrote:Not going to happen anytime soon, one faction has to incorporate all other factions before that is even remotely possible. Even the two major parties in southern kurdistan, have major in-fighting.

Just think how much those two parties have actually united and learnt to work together for the betterment of Kurds as a whole - perhaps there may be a little in-fighting now and again - not many years ago there was a great deal of actual fighting between the two groups - but they have learn to set their differences aside and co-operate :ymapplause:

Feyli_kord wrote:The only way is to politically unify the entire kurdistan, which is a difficult task. I think parts of kurdistan, we'll never be able to get back, because we're landlocked and supply routes would be easy to cut. We'll have to ally with Iran or turkey, against all other states. And that will of course not only be unlikely thing to happen, even if we did gain such support, we'd have to gurantee that no part of the kurdistan that is located in their territorial state cedes to a unified kurdistan.


Not a problem BDP have spent years helping to suppress Kurds - with Ocalan's love of Turks - Kurds in NK might just as well throw in the towel and admit that they will be TURKS - unless they ignore Ocalan and the BDP =))
Good Thoughts Good Words Good Deeds
User avatar
Anthea
Shaswar
Shaswar
Donator
Donator
 
Posts: 29496
Images: 1155
Joined: Thu Oct 18, 2012 2:13 pm
Location: Sitting in front of computer
Highscores: 3
Arcade winning challenges: 6
Has thanked: 6019 times
Been thanked: 729 times
Nationality: Kurd by heart


Return to Kurdistan Today News (Only News)

Who is online

Registered users: Bing [Bot], Google [Bot]

x

#{title}

#{text}