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Khanaqin
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KURDLAND |
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Kurdistan
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| World History |
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pagesanglais kurdistan |
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The history of Kurds and
Kurdistan
Hartford Web Publishing is not the author of the documents
in
World History Archives
and does not presume to validate their accuracy or authenticity
nor to release their copyright.
[Publisher's note: This section of World History Archives represents
a geographic and ethnic rather than political region. Kurdistan is
a plateau inhabited by Kurdish peoples that was absorbed after
World War I into southeast Turkey, northeast Iraq, and northwest
Iran,
with smaller sections in Syria and Russia.]
The history in general of West Asia
The history of Iraq's policy toward the Kurds in Northern Iraq
Documents for the
retrospective history of Kurdistan
Documents for the
contemporary political history of Kurdistan
Documents for the
social history of Kurdistan
Documents for the
media and telecommunications of Kurdistan
Resources for the
study of Kurdistan
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Kurdistan
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Map of Iraqi Kurdish Region |
Hear National Anthem
"Ey Raqîp" (Hey Enemy!) |
Text of Anthem
written 1938 |
Constitution
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| Capital: Erbil
(Arbli) |
Currency:
Iraqi Dinar (IQD) |
National
Holiday: N/A |
Population: 2,
361, 900 (1995) |
| GDP: $ N/A
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Exports: $ N/A
Imports: $ N/A |
Ethnic groups: Kurds, Trukomen, Assyrian
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Total Armed Forces/Peshmerga:
KDP- 15,000 (2002)
PUK- 10,000 (2002) |
Religions: Muslim, Christian (mainly Chaldean rite
and Syrian rite Roman Catholic and
Nestorian) |
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International Organizations: UNPO (from 1991) |
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- Sep 1922 - Mar 1923
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- Adopted 19 Mar
1992
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Kurdistan
History
The
Kurdish History
Being the native inhabitants of their land. there are no
"beginnings" for Kurdish history and people. Kurds and their history are the end
products of thousands of years of continuous internal evolution and assimilation of new
peoples and ideas intro- duced sporadically into their land. Genetically, Kurds are the
descendants of all those who ever came to settle in Kurdistan, and not any one of them. A
people such as the Guti, Kurti. Mede, Mard, Carduchi, Gordyene, Adianbene, Zila and Khaldi
signify not the ancestor of the Kurds but only an ancestor.
Archaeological finds continue to docu- ment that some of mankind's
earliest steps towards development of agnculture. domes- tication of many common farm
animals (sheep, goats, hogs and dogs). record keep- ing (the token system), development of
domestic technologies (weavmg, fired pot- tery making and glazing), metallurgy and
urbanization took place in Kurdistan, dating back between 12,000 and 8.000 years ago.
The earliest evidence so far of a unified and distinct culture (and
possibly, ethnicity) by people inhabiting the Kurdish moun- tains dates back to the Halaf
culture of 8,000-7,400 years ago. This was followed by the spread of the Ubaidian culture,
which was a foreign introduction from Mesopotamia. After about a millennium, its dominance
was replaced by the Hurrian culture, which may or may not have been the Halafian people
reasserting their domi- nance over their mountainous homeland. The Hurrian period lasted
from 6,300 to about 2,600 years ago.
Much more is known of the Hurrians. They spoke a language of the Northeast
Caucasian family of languages (or Alarodian), kin to modern Chechen and Lezgian. The
Hurrians spread far and wide, dominating much territory outside their Zagros-Taurus
mountain base. Their settlement of Anatolia was complete-all the way to the Aegean coasts.
Like their Kurdish descendents, they however did not expand too far from the mountains.
Their intrusions into the neighboring plains of Mesopotamia and the Iranian Pteau, there-
fore, were primarily military annexations with little population settlement. Their economy
was surprisingly integrated and focused, along with their political bonds, mainly running
parallel with the Zagros- Taurus mountains, rather than radiating out to the lowlands, as
was the case during the preceding (foreign) Ubaid cultural period. The mountain-plain
economic exchanges remained secondary in importance, judging by the archaeological remains
of goods and their origin.
The Hurrians-whose name survives now most prominently in the dialect and
district of Hawraman/Awraman in Kurdistan- divided into many clans and subgroups, who set
up city-states, kingdoms and empires known today after their respvi hective clan names.
These included the Gutis, Kurti, Khadi, Mards, Mushku, Manna, Hatti, Mittanni, Urartu, and
the Kassitis1es, to name just a few. All these were Hurrians, and together form the
Hurrian phase of Kurdish history.
By about 4.000 years ago, the first van- guard of the
Indo-European-speaking peoples were trickling into Kurdistan in limited numbers and
settling there. These formed the aristocracy of the Mittani, Kassite, and Hittite
kingdoms, while the common peopies there remained solidly Hurrian. By about 3,000 years
ago, the trickle had turned into a flood, and Hurrian Kurdistan was fast becoming
Indo-European Kurdistan. Far from having been wiped out, the Hurrian legacy, despite its
linguistic eclipse, remains the single most important element of the Kurdish culture until
today. It forms the substructure for every aspects of Kurdish existence, from their native
reli- gion to their art, their social organization, women's status, and even the form of
their militia warfare.
Medes, Scythians and Sagarthians are just the better-known clans of the
Indo- European-speaking Aryans who settled in Kurdistan. By about 2,600 years ago, the
Medes had already set up an empire that included all Kurdistan and vast territories far
beyond. Medeans were followed by scores of other kingdoms and city-statesQall dom- inated
by Aryan aristocracies and a populace that was becoming Indo-European, Kurdish speakers if
not so already.
By the advent of the classical era in 300 BC. Kurds were already
experiencing massive population movements that resulted in settlement and domination of
many neighboring regions. Important Kurdish polities of this time were all byproducts of
these movements. The Zelan Kurdish clan of Commagene (Adyaman area), for example, spread
to establish in addition to the Zelanid dynasty of Commagene, the Zelanid kingdom of
Cappadocia and the Zelanid empire of PontusQall in Anatolia. These became Roman vassals by
the end of the Ist century BC. In the east the Kurdish kingdoms of Gordyene, Cortea,
Media, Kirm, and Adiabene had, by the I st century B C, become confederate members of the
Parthian Federation.
While all larger Kurdish Kingdoms of the west gradually lost their
existence to the Romans, in the east they survived into the 3rd century A D and the advent
of the Sasanian Persian empire. The last major Kurdish dynasty, the Kayosids, fell in AD
380. Smaller Kurdish principalities (called the Kotyar, "mountain
administrators") however, preserved their autonomous existence into the 7th century
and the coming of Islam.
Several socio-economic revolutions in the garb of religious movements
emerged in Kurdistan at this time, many due to the exploitation by central governments,
some due to natural disasters. These continued as underground movement into the Islamic
era, bursting forth periodically to demand social reforms. The Mazdakite and Khurramite
movements are best-known among these.
The eclipse of the Sasanian and Byzantine power by the Muslim caliphate,
and its own subsequent weakening, permitted the Kurdish principalities and "mountain
administrators" to set up new, independent states. The Shaddadids of the Caucasus and
Armenia, the Rawadids of Azerbaijan, the Marwandis of eastern Anatolia; the Hasanwayhids,
Fadhilwayhids, and Ayyarids of the central Zagros and the Shabankara of Fars and Kirman
are some of the medieval Kurdish dynasties.
The Ayyubids stand out from these by the vastness of their domain. From
their capital at Cairo they ruled territories of eastern Libya, Egypt, Yemen, western
Arabia, Syria, the Holy Lands, Armenia and much of Kurdistan. As the custodians of Islam's
holy cities of Mecca, Medina and Jerusalem, the Ayyubids were instrumental in the defeat
and expulsion of the Crusaders from the Holy Land.
With the 12th and 13th centuries the Turkic nomads arrived in the area who
in time politically dominated vast segments of the Middle East. Most independent Kurdish
states succumbed to various Turkic kingdoms and empires. Kurdish principalities, however,
survived and continued with their autonomous existence until the 17th century.
Intermittently, these would rule independently when local empires weakened or collapsed.
The advent of the Safavid and Ottoman empires in the area and their
division of Kurdistan into two uneven imperial dependencies was on a par with the practice
of the preceding few centuries. Their introduction of artillery and scorched-earth policy
into Kurdistan was a new, and devastating development.
In the course of the 16th to 18th centuries, vast portions of Kurdistan
were systematically devastated and large numbers of Kurds were deported to far corners of
the Safavid and Ottoman empires. The magnitude of death and destruction wrought on
Kurdistan unified its people in their call to rid the land of these foreign vandals. The
lasting mutual suffenng awakened in Kurds a community feelingQa nationalism, that called
for a unified Kurdish state and fostering of Kurdish culture and language. Thus the
historian Sharaf al-Din Bitlisi wrote the first pan-Kurdish history the Sharafnama in
1597, as Ahmad Khani composed the national epic of Mem-o-Zin in 1695, which called for a
Kurdish state to fend for its people. Kurdish nationalism was born.
For one last time a large Kurdish kingdomQthe Zand, was born in 1750. Like
the medieval Ayyubids, however, the Zands set up their capital and kingdom outside
Kurdistan, and pursued no policies aimed at unification of the Kurdish nation. By 1867,
the very last autonomous Kurdish principalities were being systematically eradicated by
the Ottoman and Persian governments that ruled Kurdistan. They now ruled directly, via
governors, all Kurdish provinces. The situation further deteriorated after the end of the
WWI and dissolution of the Ottoman Empire.
The Treaty of Sevres (signed August 10, 1921) anticipated an independent
Kurdish state to cover large portions of the former Ottoman Kurdistan. Unimpressed by the
Kurds' many bloody uprisings for independence, France and Britain divided up Ottoman
Kurdistan between Turkey, Syria and Iraq. The Treaty of Lausanne (signed June 24, 1923)
formalized this division. Kurds of Persia/Iran, meanwhile, were kept where they were by
Teheran.
Drawing of well-guarded state boundaries dividing Kurdistan has, since
1921, aMicted Kurdish society with such a degree of fragmentation, that its impact is
tearing apar the Kurds' unity as a nation. The 1920s saw the setting up of Kurdish
Autonomous Province (the "Red Kurdistan") in Soviet Azerbaijan. It was disbanded
in 1929. In 1945, Kurds set up a Kurdish republic at Mahabad in the Sovie, occupied zone
in Iran. It lasted one year, until it was reoccupied by the Iranian army.
Since 1970s, the Iraqi Kurds have enjoyed an official autonomous status in
a portion of that state's Kurdistan. By the end of 1991, they had become all but
independent from Iraq. By 1995, however, the Kurdish government in Arbil was at the verge
of political suicide due to the outbreak of factional fighting between various Kurdish
warlords.
Since 1987 the Kurds in Turkey by themselves constituting a majority of
all KurdsQhave waged a war of national liberation against Ankara's 70 years of heavyhanded
suppression of any vestige of the Kurdish identity and its rich and ancient culture. The
massive uprising had by 1995 propelled Turkey into a state of civil war. The burgeoning
and youthful Kurdish population in Turkey, is now demanding absolute equality with the
Turkish component in that state, and failing that, full independence.
In the Caucasus, the fledgling Armenian Republic, in the course of 1992-94 wiped out
the entire Kurdish community of the former "Red Kurdistan." Having ethnically
"cleansed" it, Armenia has effectively annexed Red Kurdistan's temtory that
forms the land bridge between the Armenian enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia proper.
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KURDLAND |
Part of the
Ottoman Empire.
1623 - 1638 Persian occupation.
Nov 1918 Mosul occupied by Britain.
23 May 1919 - 17 Jun 1919 Independent Kurdish state proclaimed
in rebellion.
24 Apr 1920 Mosul declared a part of the mandated
territory of Iraq.
10 Aug 1920 Ottomas cede vilayet of Mosul
to Allies by Treaty of Sèvres.
11 Nov 1920 Installation of a provisional Iraqi
administration;
Mosul formally remained a separate
mandated territory,
most of it now de facto under Iraqi
administration
(mutessarifs were appointed
to Mosul Dec 1920 and to Kirkuk
Feb 1921), only Sulaymaniya
remaining under the direct authority
of the British High Commissioner.
1 Feb 1922 - 23 Jul 1923 Partial Turkish occupation; Mosul
claimed by Turkey.
Sep 1922 - Jul 1924 Independence of Kurdistan (from Nov
1922 Kingdom) proclaimed.
13 Jan 1926 Turkey recognizes Iraqi sovereignty
over Mosul.
1930 - 1931 Last revolt of Shaykh Mahmud
Barzani.
1931 - 1937 Rebellion by Shaykh Ahmed Barazani
(d. 1956).
1943 - 1945 Rebellion by Mulla Mustafa Barzani
(b. 1903 - d. 1979).
11 Mar 1974 Autonomous Region of Kurdistan
created by Iraq.
1 Jun 1980 Increased autonomy.
10 Mar 1992 Most of Iraqi Kurdistan occupied by
Kurdish forces.
1 Apr 1992 Iraq reoccupies Kirkuk.
19 May 1992 Kurdistan Regional Government
established (in opposition to Iraqi
rule).
4 Jul 1992 Kurdistan Regional Government formed
(not recognized by Iraq).
31 Aug 1996 Iraqi forces take control of the
capital Erbil (Arbil) at the
request of the Kurdish Democratic
Party, which establishes
a government there, opposed to the
one controlled by the
Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, which
moves to Sulaymaniyah.
4 Oct 2002 Declaration of self-rule within
"federal" union with Iraq
(not recognized by Iraq).
10-11 Apr 2003 Kurdish forces take control of Kirkuk
and Mosul.
Walis (governors) of Mosul
1758 - 17.. Hüseyin Pasha
17.. - 17.. Murad Pasha
17.. - 17.. Sa`dullah Pasha
17.. - 17.. Hasan Pasha
17.. - 17.. Mehmed Pasha
17.. - 17.. Süleyman Pasha
17.. - 17.. Mehmed Amin Pasha
17.. - 17.. Mahmud Pasha
17.. - 18.. Abdurrahman Pasha
18.. - 18.. Ahmed Pasha
18.. - 18.. Osman Pasha
18.. - 18.. Naman Pasha
1831 - 183. Omari Pasha
1833 - 1834 Yahya Pasha
1835 - 18.. Injal Pasha
18.. - 1844 ....
1844/45 - 184. Sherif Pasha
1846 Tayyar Pasha
1847 Esad Pasha
1848 Vechihi Pasha
1848 - 1855 Kiamil Pasha
1855 - 1865 part of the Elayet of Van
(of Hakkari to 1864)
1865 - 1875 the governors of Baghdad
1875 - 1889 ....
1889 Kürd Reshid Pasha
(d. 1889)
1889 - 1894 ....
1894 - 1895 Aziz Pasha
1896 Abdullah Pasha
1897 Zihdi Bey
1898 Abdülwahib Pasha
1898 - 1900 Hüseyin Hazim Pasha
1901 Hadji Reshid Pasha
1902 - 1904 Nuri Pasha
1905 - 1908 Mustafa Bey
1909 Fazil Pasha
1910 - 1912 Tahir Pasha
1913 - 1916 Süleyman Nasif Bey
1916 - 1918? Haydar Bey
British Commander
Nov 1918 - 1919 Alexander Stanhope Cobbe
(b. 1870 - d. 1931)
British Representatives
1918 - 1919 Edward William Charles Noel
1919 Ely Bannister Soane
Governor (Hikimdar) of Sulaymaniya
1 Dec 1918 - 17 Jun 1919 Shaykh Mahmud Barzani (1st time)
(in rebellion from 23 May 1919)
Sep 1922 - Jul 1924 Shaykh Mahmud Barzani (2nd time)
(in rebellion from 1922;
assumes style King of Kurdistan Nov
1922)
Chairman of the Executive Council
1975 - 19.. Hashim
Aqrawi PDK
President
24 Apr 1993 - 1996 Abdullah Rassuls
De facto rulers
- Patriotic Union of Kurdistan at Erbil -
4 Jul 1992 - Jalal Talabani
(b. 1933) PUK
(secretary-general of the PUK)
- Kurdistan Democratic Party at Sulaymaniya -
31 Aug 1996 - Massoud Mustafa Barzani
(b. 1946) PDK
(president of the KDP)
Chairman of the Legislative Council
1980 - 19.. Mohammed Amin Mohammed
Prime ministers
- Patriotic Union of Kurdistan at Erbil -
4 Jul 1992 - 26 Apr 1993 Fuad
Masum PUK
26 Apr 1993 - 21 Jan 2001 Kosrat Rasul
Ali PUK
21 Jan 2001 - Barham Salih
(b. 1960) PUK
- Kurdistan Democratic Party at Sulaymaniya -
26 Sep 1996 - 20 Dec 1999 Rowsch Shaways
(b. 1947) PDK
20 Dec 1999 - Nechervan Idris Barzani
(b. 1966) PDK
Party abbreviations: PDK = Partiya Demokrata
Kurdistane (Kurdistan Democratic Party, Kurdish nationalist); PUK
= Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (Kurdish nationalist, socialist)
worldstatesmen.Kurdistan
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KURDLAND
Kurdish
History Timeline
by Borgna Brunner
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http://www.teachervision.fen.com/spot/kurds3.html |
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http://www.infoplease.com/spot/iraqtimeline2.html |
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http://www.infoplease.com/spot/kurds3.html |
Kurdish History Timeline
by Borgna Brunner
Middle Eastern Studies;
7/1/1997; Ali, Othman
The British
manipulated the Kurds during the Lausanne Peace
Conference between 1922 and 1923 to gain cooperation
from Turkey in the isolation of Bolshevik Russia.
This position vacated earlier British support for an
independent Kurdistan in the Aug 1920 Treaty of
Sevres. The British responded with force when the
Kurds in Iraq revolted. Both Turkey and Britain
used, often false, statements about the Kurds to
support their decisions regarding a frontier dispute
between Turkey and Iraq involving lands mostly
populated by Kurds.
After the
First World War, the Kurds, like other
nationalities...
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The
Kurds have
lived in a mountainous, roughly 74,000-square-mile region known as
Kurdistan
for the past two millennia. Throughout their history they have remained
under the thumb of various conquerors and nations. Since the early 20th
century, the region has been divided between
Turkey,
Iran,
Syria, and
Iraq, all
of which have repressed, often brutally, their Kurdish minority. The Kurds,
who number 20–25 million, are the largest ethnic group in the world without
their own nation.
http://www.infoplease.com/spot/kurds3.html
| 7th Century |
The Kurds are conquered by the Arabs, beginning centuries of living under the
rule of others. Their land is later occupied by the Seljuk Turks, the Mongols,
the Safavid dynasty, and, beginning in the late 13th century, the
Ottoman Empire.
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| 1920 |
At the conclusion of World War I, the
Ottoman Empire
collapses. The Treaty of
Sèvres proposes a division of the Ottoman Empire and its territory that includes
an autonomous homeland for the Kurds. The treaty, however, is ultimately
rejected. |
| 1923 |
Turkey is
recognized as an independent nation, and the Treaty of Lausanne is signed,
replacing the Treaty of Sèvres. Under its terms, Turkey is no longer obligated
to grant Kurdish autonomy. The treaty divides the Kurdish region among Turkey,
Iraq, and Syria.
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| 1925 |
A Kurdish uprising against the new Turkish Republic is suppressed.
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| 1946 |
Iranian Kurds set up the short-lived Mahabad Republic with Soviet backing. It is
swiftly crushed by Iran. The Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) is founded by
Iraqi Kurd Mustafa Barzani, and is dedicated to the creation of an independent
Kurdistan.
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| 1961 |
The Kurds of northern Iraq, led by Mustafa Barzani, leader of the Kurdish
Democratic Party, revolt against the government of
Abdul Karim Kassem.
Iraq puts down the Kurdish revolt, and fighting between the Iraqi government and
the Kurds continues for decades.
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| 1970 |
A peace agreement is signed between the Iraqi government and the Kurds of
northern Iraq, granting them some self-rule.
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| 1974 |
The KDP attacks Iraqi troops after the government refuses to give them control
of the oil-rich province of Kirkuk, which was traditionally Kurdish territory.
The government suppresses the crushes the revolt.
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| 1975 |
Jalal Talabani, leader of the Kurdish Democratic Party (KDP), leaves to found
the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK). The two groups begin decades of
conflict.
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| 1978 |
In Turkey,
Abdullah Ocalan helps
to create the Kurdistan Workers Party, or PKK, to seek Kurdish independence. He
assumes leadership of the leftist organization.
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| 1979 |
Iran's Islamic revolution sparks a Kurdish revolt in Iran that is then quickly
suppressed by Iran.
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| 1984 |
On August 15, under
Ocalan's direction, the PKK turns to armed struggle. Thousands of Kurds in
southeast Turkey
join the cause, fuelled by nationalism and dissatisfaction with living
conditions.
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| 1988 |
Iraq retaliates against the Kurds for supporting Iran during the
Iran-Iraq war,
and through the "al-Anfal" ("spoils of war") campaign, slaughters thousands of
civilians and uproots 1.5 million from their homes. Thousands flee to Turkey.
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| 1991 |
After the Persian
Gulf War, Iraq's Kurds rise up against
Saddam Hussein,
encouraged by the United States. Iraq quashes the rebellions, killing thousands.
The U.N. coalition forces do not come to the aid of the Kurds, but eventually
establish a no-fly
zone in the north for their protection. Iraqi Kurds now control a
15,000-square-mile autonomous region in Northern Iraq populated by 3 million
Kurds.
Turkey lifts
ban set by former military government on the use of Kurdish language in
unofficial settings. Kurdish remains illegal in schools, political settings, and
broadcasts.
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| 1992 |
A large-scale Turkish military operation attacks PKK bases in Iraq, where
Kurdish safe havens had been allowed to develop by international forces after
the Persian Gulf
War.
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| 1993 |
The Turkish government grants limited autonomy to the Kurds, though Kurdish
political parties continue to be banned. Martial law is imposed to quell
uprisings. Tens of thousands of security forces are sent to southeastern Turkey
as the struggle intensifies.
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| 1994 |
The two main political groups of the Iraqi Kurds, the Kurdish Democratic Party
(KDP), led by Masoud Barzani (his father and grandfather were legendary Kurdish
freedom fighters), and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), headed by Jalal
Talabani, begin fighting each other for control of the Kurdish autonomous
region.
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| 1995 |
In a military operation similar to the one in 1992, about 35,000 Turkish troops
invade PKK bases in Iraq.
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| 1998 |
The PUK's Talabani and the KDP's Barzani sign a peace agreement, ending the
four-year war between rival Iraqi Kurd factions.
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| 1999 |
Abdullah Ocalan is
captured, convicted of treason and separatism, and sentenced to death. It
immediately spurs a rash of bombings and other terrorist attacks both in Turkey
and abroad. Ocalan urges Kurdish rebels to pursue political rather than violent
means.
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| 2000 |
The Turkish government announces that
Ocalan's sentence would
be suspended until the case is reviewed by a European court.
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| 2002 |
The Iraqi Kurdish regional parliament meets for the first time in six years,
indicating a real sign of unity between Iraqi Kurdish factions since the
1994–1998 war.
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| 2003 |
The Kurds join U.S. and British forces in
defeating Saddam
Hussein's regime.
Four Kurds are appointed by the U.S. to the Iraqi Governing Council, including
Barzani and Talabani.
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| 2004 |
In March 2004, Syrian Kurds rioted and clashed with police for several days
after a brawl at a soccer game. It was Syria's worst unrest in decades.
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