by Rodi Hevian
Kurdistan is divided, and the Kurdish people are not united geographically. They are split among numerous political parties and institutions in several different countries. Various early attempts to build Kurdish national movements after 1918 failed. Modern Kurdish parties began to emerge after World War II. In the post-Cold War era, Kurdish movements have gained momentum politically, economically, socially, as well as at the regional and international levels. The current period may well be a particularly crucial one for Kurdish aspirations. This article offers an overview of Kurdish political parties and references the most significant literature and resources available on them.
Map of Kurdistan according to Google
INTRODUCTION
As Kurdistan is divided and the Kurdish
people are not united geographically, they are split among numerous
political parties and institutions in several different countries. They
follow different leaders in each region of Kurdistan. After World War
I, the Kurds created national organizations and institutions to further
their cause. These included the Society for the Rise of Kurdistan (Kurt
Teali Cemiyeti), established in 1918 in Istanbul; the Free Kurdistan
Movement in 1923 in Diyarbekir; and Xoybun in 1927 in Lebanon. The goal
of these organizations was to lead Kurdish rebellions against the
Ottoman Empire and later, against Turkish state. Yet all of these
organizations failed to achieve their goals and vanished from the public
sphere in the following years.
However, toward the end of the Second
World War, the first modern Kurdish political party was established. The
Kurdistan Democratic Party in Iran (PDKI) was founded in 1945 in
Eastern Kurdistan, Iran, by Qazi Muhammad. There, they declared the
short-lived Mahabad Republic of Kurdistan in January 1946.
The purpose of this article is to
describe the current landscape of the main Kurdish political parties in
Iran, Turkey, Syria, and Iraq, including their leaders, political goals,
their transformation, influence, and their significance for Kurdish
society. It provides a brief history about the Kurds and Kurdistan and
also includes international Kurdish organizations.
THE KURDS
The Kurds make up the largest nation in the world without an independent state.[1]
They number over 30 million and are spread throughout the Middle East,
mainly concentrated in Turkey, Iran, Iraq, and Syria. They “consider
themselves… descendants of the Medes and other Indo-European tribes who
settled around the Zagros Mountains range some 4,000 years ago.”[2] Despite not having a country of their own, the Kurds have succeeded in maintaining their ethnic identity over the years.
“The Kurdish world is diverse, and there
are no exact linguistic and religious criteria by which the Kurds can
be defined. There are a number of Kurdish dialects; there is no single
religion that binds them; and they are spread out across many different
countries.”[3]
This division is the result of geographical factors. “Located at the
crossroads of civilizations, Kurdistan has been traversed by numerous
invaders and occupying forces. Alexander the Great followed this path on
his way to the east, as did the Persians en route to the west.”
In later periods, “the Romans, the
Byzantines, and the Sassanids all made expeditions with the goal of
dominating the region. Century-long battles between the Ottoman and
Persian Empires all took place in Kurdistan. This led to the division of
the land of the Kurds in the first half of seventeenth century,
following the 1639 treaty of Zuhab between the two fighting empires.”[4]
Following the First World War and the demise of Ottoman Empire,
Kurdistan once again became subject to partition by the victors of the
war. Kurdistan was divided among three newly established nation
states–Turkey, Iraq, and Syria.
IRAN
The Democratic Party of Kurdistan in Iran (PDKI)
The Democratic Party of Iranian
Kurdistan (PDKI), considered the “ultimate modern Kurdish political
party,” was established on August 16, 1945, by Qazi Muhammad in Mahabad
in eastern Kurdistan/Iran.[5] Just
a few months after its creation, on January 22, 1946, the PDKI
established the “Republic of Kurdistan,” (also referred to by historians
as the “Republic of Mahabad,” since Mahabad was chosen as the capital)
in a section of Iranian Kurdistan.
With the northern part of Iran under
Soviet control just after the Second World War, Soviet support had been
critical for the establishment of the Kurdish republic. However, less
than year later, an agreement between the Iranian central government and
the Soviet Union was signed, bringing the republic’s short-lived
independence to an end. On December 17, 1946, Iranian troops launched a
major military offensive into the region, effectively ending the
republic’s short-lived existence.[6]
Following the republic’s collapse, many
PDKI leaders were imprisoned. Twenty were executed, including Qazi
Muhammad, PDKI head and president of the republic. “Thereafter, the PDKI
went underground. In the 1970s, under the direction of its new leader,
respected Kurdish intellectual Dr. Abdul Rahman Ghassemlou, the party
joined the uprisings against the shah’s dictatorship. However, soon
after Ayatollah Khomeini had seized power in 1979, Khomeini declared
what he termed a ‘holy war’ on the Kurds of Iran. This resulted in the
deaths of over 10,000 Kurds.” [7]
Based on reports published by Kurdish sources close to the PDKI:
Following Ayatollah Khomeini’s death in 1989, the Iranian regime, under then President Hashemi Rafsanjani, expressed its readiness for negotiations with Ghassemlou in Austria. The PDKI delegation accepted. On July 13, 1989, in Vienna, Ghassemlou and his aides, Abdullah Ghaderi-Azar–the PDKI representative abroad–and Fadil Rasoul–the intermediary and an Iraqi Kurd–were shot dead by Iranians at the negotiating table.
According to Austrian MP of the Green
Party Peter Pilz, “Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, president of Iran from
2005-2013, had been responsible for the gathering, had assisted in
preparing the weapons, and had been a member of the execution team,
which also included Mohammed Jafar Sahraroudi, Hadji Moustafawi, and
Amir Mansur Bozorgian.”[8]
In 1992, “the Iranian regime targeted the PDKI’s new leader Dr. Sadegh
Sharafkandi, in Berlin, Germany. Sharafkandi and three of his friends
were murdered by the Iranians and their proxy Hizballah at the Mykonos
Greek restaurant in central Berlin.”[9]
The PDKI renounced its armed struggle in
the ensuing years and went underground once again. According to the
PDKI’s party program, “the highest body of the PDKI is its Central
Committee elected in the PDKI’s Congress. The Central Committee also
elects an executive body best known as the Political Bureau, which also
includes the general secretary, who is elected by the Central
Committee.”
The PDKI leader, as of the writing of this article, is Mustafa Hijri.[10]
The PDKI, which has held 15 conventions, also endorses democratic
struggle in Iran, autonomy, and the right to self-determination for the
Kurds. In the past, especially during the Iran-Iraq War, it was backed
by the Iraqi government, and it held a strong position on the ground in
the Kurdish region. Since its decision to abandon armed struggle in the
1990s, it has become weak and disorganized. It has some influence,
although not strong, in Iranian Kurdistan, and it is active among the
Kurdish diaspora in North America, Europe, and Australia.
The Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP)
The Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) is a splinter group of the PDKI and is led by Khalid Azizi. In 2006, at the PDKI’s 13th
convention, the dispute over choosing its next leader led some senior
members to leave the party. Under Azizi’s leadership, they created the
Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP). In 2012, “the PDKI and KDP met in
Iraqi Kurdistan to discuss a possible reunification,”[11]
however, for the time being, they function independently. The KDP is
based in Iraqi Kurdistan and has no real influence on the masses in
Iranian Kurdistan.
Komala
“Komala, meaning ‘society’ in Kurdish,
was established in 1969 in Tehran as a Marxist Kurdish movement. Led by
Abdullah Mohtadi, it was mainly inspired by Mao’s China and other
socialist countries.”[12]
From the beginning, it engaged in a clandestine campaign and became
part of the ongoing Kurdish struggle against the Iranian shah. However,
in 1983, it joined other leftist movements in Iran, and together they
formed the short-lived Communist Party of Iran. In the following months,
Komala left the Communist Party and continued its struggle under its
own name. Along with the Kurdistan Democratic Party of Iran (PDKI),
Komala became one of the two main Kurdish parties in Iran fighting for
Kurdish rights against the Islamic Republic of Iran.
“In the mid-1980s, Komala was active and
influential around Sanandaj, the capital city of the Iranian Kurdistan
province, while the PDKI was more powerful around Mahabad, the former
Kurdish republic in Iran.”[13] However, internal fighting broke out between the PDKI and Komala in the mid-1980s, leading to hundreds of deaths.
Not long after the 1989 murder of PDKI
leader Ghassemlou in Vienna, one of Komala’s most prominent figures was
killed in Larnaca, Cyprus.[14]
In 1997, Komala joined the establishment of the Kurdistan National
Congress in Brussels with other Kurdish parties. Although it had
established military bases in Iraqi Kurdistan, the U.S. invasion of Iraq
ended its military activities there. The current leader of Komala, as
of the writing of this article, is Abdullah Mohtadi. The organization
has no strong influence among the Kurds in Iran. It runs some community
centers in Scandinavia and in North America. It also owns a satellite TV
station (Rojhelat TV) in Sweden, which broadcasts in Kurdish and Farsi,
and a newspaper based in Iraqi Kurdistan.
The Free Life Party of Kurdistan (PJAK)
In 2004, the Free Life Party of
Kurdistan (Partiya Jiyana Azad a Kurdistane, PJAK) was created by
Iranian Kurds under Haji Ahmadi’s leadership. The party calls itself a
political, social, and cultural movement with an armed wing. PJAK and
the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) also share Qandil as a base. PJAK was
condemned as a terrorist group by the United States in 2009. PJAK,
considered to be a PKK splinter group, is also outlawed in Iran.[15]
PJAK leaders and fighters regard
imprisoned PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan as their supreme leader and share
his philosophy. The party operates military bases and training camps in
the Qandil region bordered with Iran, Iraq, and Turkey and has around
3,000 armed fighters. Half of the PJAK’s forces are female, and the
movement has a strong commitment to women rights in Kurdistan and around
the world. The group took up arms just after its establishment and has
challenged the Iranian regime ever since. “In 2011, heavy clashes broke
out between PJAK and the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps.” This ended
with a ceasefire in September 2011,[16] still in effect, as of the writing of this article.
PJAK is a member of the Kurdistan
Communities Union (Koma Civaken Kurdistan or KCK), an alliance of
Kurdish groups and divisions led by their elected Executive Council. The
KCK’s Executive Council is led by Cemil Bayik, acting leader of the
Kurdistan Workers’ Party. “PJAK’s ultimate objective is to establish
semi-autonomous regional entities or Kurdish federal states in Iran,
Turkey, and Syria–similar to the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) in
Iraq.” However, “for the time being, their primary mission is political.
That is, they seek to spread their message across the Kurdish region of
Iran and to weaken tribalism and traditional politics as well as to
fuel Kurdish nationalism.”[17]
PJAK is still led by its founding
president Haji Ahmadi, who is a German citizen, and has different bodies
and branches. Its armed wing is called HRK (Hezen Rojhelati Kurdistan),
the military forces of Eastern Kurdistan; its women’s branch is The
Union of the Women of Eastern Kurdistan; and its youth movement, the
Union of the Youth of Eastern Kurdistan. PJAK is also a member of the
Kurdistan National Congress (KNK) based in Brussels and runs its own
satellite TV station, Newroz, based in Oslo and licensed by Norway.
IRAQ
The Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP)
The Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) was
created in Baghdad in August 1946. Its creation was in response to
Mustafa Barzani’s desire to become financially and politically
independent of Qazi Muhammad and the Mahabad Republic of Kurdistan.[18]
As the Kurdish national freedom movement, the KDP became the Iraqi
branch of the Kurdistan Democratic Party of Iran. Barzani was elected as
president while in exile, and Hamza Abdullah was elected secretary
general on August 16, 1946. Since then, the party has worked for Kurdish
rights and also fought against the dictatorship in Iraq. Mustafa
Barzani served as the party’s leader from the beginning until his death
in 1979. After his death, his son Idris Barzani replaced him. In 1987,
his younger son Masoud Barzani became the new party leader.
At the party’s 13th congress
held in December 2010 in the capital of the Kurdistan region, Erbil.
There, the congress reelected Masoud Barzani as president of the party.
Further, Masoud Barzani’s nephew, Nechirvan Barzani, was made vice
president. As of the writing of this article, Masoud Barzani is
president of the Iraqi Kurdistan Region. “In addition, the KDP and the
Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) coalition occupies 59 seats in the
Kurdistan Regional Parliament and leads the region’s government with
Nechirvan Barzani serving as prime minister.”[19]
“In the 2010 Iraqi elections, the Kurdistan list under Jalal Talabani,
both general secretary of the PUK and president of Iraq, won 43 seats
and 13.2 percent of the total votes.”[20]
Other influential names in the KDP are
Hoshyar Zebari, the Iraqi foreign minister, and Mansour Barzani the head
of Iraqi Kurdistan’s intelligence service, Parastin. The Barzani family
and the KDP wield influence not only in Iraqi Kurdistan but also in
Iranian Kurdistan. They provide sanctuary in the KRG area of northern
Iraq for their Iranian sister party, the Democratic Party of Iranian
Kurdistan. Among the Turkish Kurds, their influence is weaker. The
Kurdistan Democratic Party of Bakur (north) is not a major player. The
Syrian affiliate, the Kurdish Democratic Party in Syria is similarly
uninfluential. The Kurdistan Democratic Party has representatives in
Turkey, in nearly every European country, and in North America. It also
maintains good relations with Israel. The KDP runs several television
stations as well, including major ones such as Kurdistan TV, Zagros TV,
and Rudaw.
The Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK)
The Patriotic Union of Kurdistan was
established in 1975 by current President of Iraq Jalal Talabani. “It was
founded following the Iraqi army’s defeat of the Kurdish rebellion led
by Mustafa Barzani, which forced Barzani to flee to the United States
and led to the breakup of the Kurdistan Democratic Party. Along with his
close friends Nashirwan Mustafa Amin and Ali Askari, Talabani announced
the PUK’s establishment on June 1, 1975, in Damascus, Syria.”[21]
The PUK brought together various socialist groups in Iraqi Kurdistan.
Since then, the PUK and the KDP have become the two major rival parties
of the region, each with an almost equal power circle. After the First
Gulf War, the PUK joined the Kurdistan Parliament in Northern Iraq and
as did the KDP. Yet disputes over power and revenue sharing erupted into
a civil war in 1994.
“In September 1998, Jalal Talabani and
Masoud Barzani signed a peace agreement in Washington, D.C., under the
auspices of the United States,” however, “the Kurdish Regional
Government remained split between the two rival administrations until
after the 2003 U.S. invasion and the fall of Saddam Hussein’s Ba’th
regime, when the PUK and KDP joined forces under a united government
based in Erbil.”[22]
The PUK’s secretary general, Talabani, was elected president of Iraq in
2005 by the Iraqi National Assembly and was reelected for another term
in 2010.
Jalal Talabani’s wife, Hero Talabani;
Barham Salih, former prime minister of the Kurdistan Regional Government
and deputy prime minister of Iraq; and Mele Baxtiyar, a member of the
PUK’s Central Committee are the party’s most powerful figures. In
addition, Qubat Talabani, Jalal Talabani’s son, also serves as the KRG’s
representative in the United States. In 2006, Nashirwan Mustafa,
long-time associate and possible successor of Talabani, left the PUK in
2009 and established his own movement, known as Gorran or the Change
Movement.
According to the PUK’s program, the
party “strives for the right of self-determination for the Kurdish
nation in a democratic Iraq and advocates a political solution to the
Kurdish question based on the principles of the rule of law, democracy,
human rights, and the recognition of national and cultural identity.” In
addition, it believes in “the promotion of a civil society with
democratic institutions. It works for the implementation of the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights” “it favors a free-market
economy.”[23]
Like the KDP, the PUK has the representatives in Europe. It also and
has good relations with the West and with Iran. The party’s affiliated
business elite run a major television station, Kurdsat, as well as daily
newspapers, radios, and monthly magazines. Before its dissolution, the
PUK was the balancing power against the KDP. Now, however, many believe
it has lost about a third of its supporters to the Gorran Movement led
by Nashirwan Mustafa. The Kurdish Democratic Progressive Party (KDPP) in
Syria, which is one of the oldest Kurdish movements in the Kurdish
region, is the PUK’s sister party. In addition, the Komala Party in
Iranian Kurdistan has strong ties with the PUK, finding sanctuary and
operating in the PUK-dominated areas.
Gorran: The Change Movement
Gorran is a liberal and reformist
Kurdish political party in Iraqi Kurdistan under the leadership of
Nashirwan Mustafa. Founded in 2009, it is the main opposition to the
ruling two-party coalition of the Kurdistan Democratic Party and
Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (the Kurdistan List), which governs the
Kurdistan Regional Government. Shortly after its formation, Gorran
participated in the regional elections in Kurdistan. Contrary to
expectations, it gained a surprising 22 percent of the total votes in
Iraqi Kurdistan and came in second after the Kurdistan List (comprising
the KDP and PUK), with 25 seats in the 111-seat Kurdish Parliament. In
the 2010 Iraqi elections, it refused to join the Kurdistan List and run
under its name. They won only 8 seats, whereas the Kurdistan List gained
43 seats.
Following the Arab Spring in February
2011, Gorran led the first demonstrations in the Kurdistan region,
mainly in Sulaymaniya. The movement demanded political, social, and
economic reforms as well as an end to rampant corruption and nepotism.
The protests turned violent and the security forces intervened. Ten
people were reportedly killed and hundreds were injured. According to
BBC, “Gorran has already shaken the political landscape in Kurdish
areas,”[24]and
support for the movement “stems from the simple fact that it is the
new, dynamic, fresh option in Kurdistan, calling for “an end to monopoly
control of power.”[25]
One of Gorran’s main objectives is to
“uproot rampant corruption.” The party is particularly popular among
Kurdish youth. In addition, “many former PUK/KDP members, retired
Peshmergas (the armed forces of the Kurdish Regional Government), and
academics are involved in the movement’s campaigns against ongoing
two-party domination.”[26]
The movement’s leader, Nashirwan Mustafa, served as commander-in-chief
of the Peshmerga forces from the late 1970s to 1992. He was the
mastermind of the 1991 Kurdish uprising against the Saddam Hussein
dictatorship and has been referred to as the “legendary Peshmerga
commander.” Gorran also operates the KNN television channel; a radio
station, Denge Gorran; and publishes a daily newspaper, Rozhnam.[27] Gorran is also a member of the Kurdistan National Congress (KNK) in Brussels.
The Kurdistan Democratic Solution Party: KDSP
The Kurdistan Democratic Solution Party
(KDSP) was created in 2002 in Iraqi Kurdistan as a pro-Kurdistan
Workers’ Party (PKK) movement. For around the first two years after its
establishment, KDSP engaged in armed struggle. However, after the 2003
U.S. invasion, it abandoned this and joined the political system. As of
the writing of this article, Diyar Garib is the party leader.[28]
The party held its fourth annual congress in Kirkuk from May 1-3, 2008,
but was banned from participating in the July 2009 KRG elections.
Following Turkish demands, the KDSP’s offices were shut down in many
cities by Barzani’s Kurdistan Democratic Party, though the party itself
continued to operate. The KDSP advocates the right to self-determination
and an autonomous Kurdish government within the existing states. The
party is gaining ground among women and youth due to its secular
philosophy and commitment to the women’s rights and feminism. It is also
a member of the Kurdistan Communities Union (KCK) and the Kurdistan
National Congress (KNK) based in Brussels.
The Kurdistan Islamic Union (KIU)
The Kurdistan Islamic Union (KIU) was
founded in Iraqi Kurdistan in 1994 by a group of religious Kurds led by
Salahuddin Bahaadin. A Muslim Brotherhood affiliate, KIU’s goal is the
establishment of an Islamic state in Iraq that would incorporate the
principles of Western-style democracy as well as freedom of the press as
compatible with Shari’a law.[29]
The party also promotes free trade, entrepreneurship, and investment as
well as combatting corruption and bureaucracy. In addition, KIU
advocates women’s rights and “full citizenship for ethnic and sectarian
groups.” It is also involved in charity work in the region. Many of its
supporters are students and those in rural areas. “In the January 2005
elections, the KIU joined other Kurdish parties to form the Democratic
Patriotic Alliance of Kurdistan, which won 75 out of 275 seats in the
Iraqi National Assembly.” It then left the Democratic Patriotic alliance
to run under its own name in the December 2005 parliamentary elections,
winning five seats. [30]
“In 2009, however, the Islamic Union
received only six seats in elections in the Kurdistan region and gained
only four seats in the 2010 elections in Iraq.” The KIU’s leader, as of
the writing of this article, is Secretary-General Mohammed Faraj. The
KIU refers to itself as “a reformist national party, striving to resolve
society’s political, social, economic, and cultural issues from an
Islamic perspective.”[31]
The party was accused of organizing an attack on December 2, 2011, in
Zakho, in which after Friday prayers, an unidentified group of people
raided liquor stores, beauty salons, a Chinese massage parlor, and
several hotels that were selling alcohol. The violence spread to other
Kurdish cities as well. In retaliation, KDP members burned down KIU’s
offices throughout the Kurdish region.[32] While there are other minor Islamic movements in the Kurdish region, the KIU is the largest and most influential.
SYRIA
The Kurdistan Democratic Party in Syria (KDPS)
“The Kurdistan Democratic Party in Syria
(KDPS) is one of the many Kurdish parties that emerged from the 1957
Kurdish Democratic Party in Syria (1957 KDPS)” and “is the sister party
of Massoud Barzani’s Kurdistan Democratic Party in Iraq.”[33]
“The original party was founded by Osman Sabri–a Kurd from Turkey who
had fled to Syria after the unsuccessful Shaykh Said rebellion in the
Kurdish region in 1925–along with Abd al-Hamid Hajji Darwish, Hamzah
Diweran, and other Kurdish politicians.”[34] Due to a ban on opposition parties, it has not been recognized by the Syrian government.
The KDPS was a member of the Kurdish
Political Congress, established in 2009, prior the Syrian uprising. It
also joined the Kurdish National Council, formed in October 2011. Masoud
Barzani appointed Dr. Abd al-Hakim Bashar secretary-general of the
party in 2008. Bashar also serves as chairman of the Kurdish National
Council.[35]
This Kurdistan Democratic Party in Syria
is not to be confused with the Kurdish Democratic Party in Syria led by
Nasraddin Ibrahim, which also took on the name of “Al-Parti,” and other
minor parties that share the same name in order to highlight their
roots in the 1957 KDPS. Bashar is also the chairman of the Kurdish
National Council (KNC), a newly formed umbrella organization
representing around ten Syrian-Kurdish parties. The party is considered
the second strongest political party in Syrian Kurdistan after the
PKK-affiliated Democratic Union Party (PYD). KDPS’s desire to establish
its own Peshmerga forces have not yet been realized due to the PYD’s
opposition. There are, however, reports that some 2,000 Kurdish fighters
defected from the Syrian army and are training in Iraqi Kurdistan.
Yekiti: The Kurdish Union Party
The Kurdish Union Party (Yekiti) was
established in 2009 by Fouad Aleko, Isma’il Hamo, and together with
other Kurdish politicians. Hamo succeeded the former secretary general
in 2010. “The Yekiti movement is one of ten political groups that
created the Kurdish National Council (KNC), an opposition alliance
established in October 2011 in Syrian Kurdistan.”[36]
According to its program, “Yekiti believes in dialogue and democratic
means to achieve its objectives…. It stands for democracy, free and fair
elections, freedom of press, political pluralism, and respect for
individual rights and national groups.”[37]
Yekiti also works for federalism in Syria in accordance with the Iraqi
model, whereby the Kurds have long had de facto rule in the Kurdish
region. Yekiti does not have any known military force; however, there
have been reports of some “Yekiti members infiltrating the Free Syrian
Army-controlled Selahaddin Eyyubi Brigade near Aleppo in order to gain
political leverage and military aid from Turkey.”[38]
Azadi: The Kurdistan Freedom Party
The Kurdistan Freedom Party, also known
as Azadi, was founded in 2005, “by the then members of the Kurdish Left
Party, led by Hayrettin Murat, and the Kurdish People’s Union Party, led
by Mustafa Cuma.” Murat was elected as Azadi’s first secretary-general.[39]
Mustafa Cuma, one of the leading figures of the newly created movement
was arrested in 2008 by the Ba’th regime. He was released in 2011, after
nearly three years in prison. Following his release, Cuma was elected
as the new secretary general of the party, while Bashar Emin became
deputy secretary general of the party. Cuma’s election as secretary
general became the subject of an internal dispute, leading some
members–including Hayrettin Murat–to leave the party.
“There are now two different Azadi
parties in the Kurdish region, one led by Cuma and the other by Mustafa
Hidir Oso. Azadi was one of the more successful Kurdish parties in
Syria, enjoying considerable public support on the ground, before the
uprising in the country broke out in 2011.”[40]
It joined the Kurdish Supreme council with other smaller Kurdish
parties and signed the Erbil Agreement under Masoud Barzani’s auspices.
However, Azadi has been accused of collaborating with Turkey and jihadi
movements that attacked Serekaniye, a Kurdish town located on the border
with Turkey and Aleppo’s Kurdish neighborhoods.
Mustafa Cuma is known for his opposition to the PYD and its armed forces, the YPG. He told the Kurdish newspaper Rudaw that “they would establish their own militia group and would fight the YPG if necessary.”[41]
The party supports the Selahaddin Eyyubi Brigade, a small Kurdish
militia group fighting the Asad regime in the Aleppo region under FSA
control, and does not deny this. Cuma, the party’s current leader, lives
in Iraqi Kurdistan, as do other Kurdish leaders of the region.
The Democratic Union Party (PYD)
“Founded in 2003 as an offshoot of the
Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), the Kurdish Democratic Union Party (PYD)
is one of the most prominent Kurdish opposition parties in Syria.”[42]
It is also a member of the Kurdish Supreme Council (KSC), which brings
together all of the Kurdish parties in the region. Among the PYD’s
stated goals are “the constitutional recognition of Kurdish rights and
‘democratic autonomy’ for the Kurdish region.” Following the signing of
the Adana agreement in 1998 between Syria and Turkey and after the 2004
Qamishli uprising, the PYD experienced “years of violent repression at
the hands of the Syrian regime. In the ensuing weeks of the uprising in
Syria, the PYD joined the Kurdish Patriotic Movement in May 2011, but
declined to join the Kurdish opposition parties that formed the Kurdish
National Council (KNC).”[43]
In 2010, Salih Muslim, a chemical engineer from the region, was made party chairmen.
[Muslim], who was originally based in
Iraq in order to avoid political persecution by the Ba’th regime…
returned to the Kurdish region of Syria in order to take direct part in
the unfolding of events. He urged the Kurds to fight for their rights.
He added that the Kurds had fought for Arabs, Turks, and Iranians, but
received nothing in return and that it was time for the Kurds to get rid
of this shame and fight their own people.[44]
Muslim’s “leadership was reconfirmed at
the PYD’s fifth party congress, held on June 16, 2012.” There, “the
party’s Central Committee was expanded and dual leadership was
introduced. Asiyah Abdullah was elected co-chairwoman of the party,”[45]
as part of the PYD’s policy of equal representation of the sexes at all
levels. “Despite accusations, the PYD denies any organic ties with the
PKK but accepts the ideas and philosophy of PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan,
who is imprisoned in Turkey.”[46]
While the number of members is unknown,
the PYD is one of the largest parties in Syria and the strongest and
best organized in the Kurdish region. “According to a Western diplomat
in Damascus, many Syrian Kurds have previously been active in the PKK,
and there are many Kurdish families in Syria where at least one family
member is a PKK veteran or was killed while fighting with the PKK. Many
of these families sympathize with the PYD.”[47]
The PYD’s armed wing, YPG (Popular Defense Committees), controls almost
all Kurdish towns and villages including the oil-rich Rimalan in the
region and is estimated to have an armed force of about 20,000, half of
which are female fighters.
In addition, “the PYD dominates its
Syrian Kurdish political rivals, such as the Kurdish national council
(KNC), by virtue of its significant popular support and its effective
organization.”[48]
Aside from the YPG, the PYD has created a regional police force called
Asayish in Kurdish. It also runs newly established Kurdish schools
across the region and provides public services. Although, the PYD has
been accused by the Kurdish Azadi party and Kurdistan Democratic Party
for having ties with the Ba’th regime in Damascus, it has always
rejected such allegations. In addition, in the course of 2012 and 2013,
it took on Syrian army around the Kurdish Neighborhoods of Aleppo and
Qamishli and has been fighting jihadi rebels in the Kurdish region. The
PYD is represented at the Kurdistan National Congress in Brussels and is
a founding member of the Kurdistan Communities Union (KCK). Unlike the
Kurdish National Council (KNC), which has strong ties with the Kurdistan
Democratic Party (KDP) led by Masoud Barzani, the PYD enjoys good
relations with the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) led by Jalal
Talabani.
The Kurdish Democratic Progressive Party in Syria (KDPP)
The Kurdish Democratic Progressive Party
(KDPP) is a splinter group of the Kurdistan Democratic Party in Syria
and was created in 1965. Abd al-Hamid Darwish, the leader of the party,
as of the writing of this article, is “one of the most senior and
experienced politicians among Syrian Kurds. Darwish, who has been the
secretary general of the party since its creation, has maintained
personal ties with the leaders of the Kurdish parties in other parts of
Kurdistan.”[49]
The KDPP of Syria is the sister party of Jalal Talabani’s Patriotic
Union of Kurdistan (PUK). It is also a member of the Kurdish National
Council (KNC).[50]
“The ongoing rivalry between the KDP and
PUK historically has translated into a KDPS-KDPP competition that
persists alongside other divisions under the somewhat loose KNC
umbrella.”[51]
The KDPP also has good relations with the PKK’s off-shoot, the
Democratic Union Party (PYD). The KDPP struggles for a decentralized
Syria and an inclusive government that recognizes the political and
cultural rights of the Kurds and other minority groups in the country.
The Kurdish National Council (KNC)
Kurdish National Council in Syria is an
amalgamation of around ten Kurdish parties in Syria. It was founded in
October 2011, during a period when the Syrian National Council was
declared in Istanbul, Turkey. The goal of the KNC was to unite the
Kurdish parties and to organize a struggle against the Syrian regime in
the Kurdish region. Nevertheless, it faced challenges from the
PKK-affiliated Democratic Union Party (PYD).
The PYD did not agree to join the KNC,
and from the time of the uprising in Syria acted independently. While
the KNC attempted to join the Syrian National Council (SNC), its demands
were not met, leading the KNC to leave the SNC shortly after its
establishment. The KNC is under the control of Masoud Barzani, the
president of the Iraqi Kurdistan Region, and is led by Dr. Abd al-Hakim
Bashar, the leader of Kurdistan Democratic Party in Syria (KDPS). It is
also a member of the Kurdish Supreme Council, established in accordance
with the July 2012 Erbil agreement, sponsored by Masoud Barzani.[52]
It was created in order to balance the
PKK-affiliated Kurdish Democratic Union Party (PYD). “The KNC demands
constitutional recognition of Kurdish national identity, an end to
discriminatory policies and laws–including the prohibition of the use of
the Kurdish language and establishment of Kurdish schools–compensation
for those affected by the Ba’th Party’s policies to date, and political
decentralization of government–in the context of Syria’s territorial
integrity.”[53]
TURKEY
Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK)
The “Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) was
founded in 1978 as a reaction to Turkish oppression of Kurds in Turkey
and the continuous military interference in the Kurdish regions in the
southeast part of modern Turkey.”[54]
“The PKK’s founding leader Abdullah Ocalan and its Central Committee
members–including M. Hayri Durmus, Cemil Bayik, Mazlum Dogan, Mehmet
Karasungur, Kesire Yildirim, and Sahin Donmez–came from radical
political student circles in urban centers.”[55]
“Initially, the organization held a Marxist political ideology,
emphasizing the need for a radical transformation of the social and
political organization of Kurdish society. It sought the establishment
of an independent Kurdistan, uniting Kurds across several borders.”[56]
“After the military coup in Turkey in
1980, the PKK’s leading members fled to Syria and later established
training camps in the Beqaa Valley in Lebanon, which was controlled by
Syria at the time. In August 1984, the PKK launched its armed struggle
against Turkey by attacking Turkish army posts located in the Kurdish
cities of Eruh and Semdinli, right on the border with Iraqi Kurdistan.”[57] In Turkish terms, the event marked the 29th
Kurdish rebellion; according to Kurdish historian and writer Ahmet
Kahraman, the third Kurdish uprising had begun. This opened a new
chapter in the long history of Kurdish rebellion and insurrection in
Turkey.
During the first few years of the
conflict, the Turkish government did not take the PKK seriously. The
PKK’s influence soon spread to Kurdish communities all over the world.
It abandoned its Marxist ideology and adapted itself to the new
post-Cold War world. Kurdish nationalism became the movement’s dominant
philosophy, which enabled it to gain the sympathy of millions of Kurds
worldwide.
“By the mid-1990s, the PKK had virtual
control over large parts of southeast Turkey; at its peak, the group had
more than 15,000 operatives in the region.”[58]
The PKK-led Kurdish war with Turkey since 1984, has claimed more than
40,000 lives on both sides, mostly Kurds, and has resulted in the
destruction of more than 3,000 Kurdish villages by Turkey’s security
forces.
However, in 1998:
Ocalan was forced to leave Damascus due to Turkey’s threats that it would invade Syria if it continued to support the PKK and host Ocalan. He left for Europe in hopes of finding another safe haven and, nevertheless, failed in his attempt. After traveling between Moscow, Rome, and Athens, Ocalan was eventually caught and delivered to Turkish agents in Nairobi, Kenya. It is widely believed that Ocalan’s arrest Ocalan was part of an international intelligence operation.[59]
“He was later tried and sentenced to
death by a Turkish court, but his sentence was commuted to life in
prison following the abolishment of the death penalty in Turkey in
October 2002.”[60]
“Upon Ocalan’s call from his prison cell, the PKK declared a ceasefire
in 1999 and withdrew most of its forces into Iraqi Kurdistan, where it
was based. In 2002, in response to Ocalan’s request, the PKK’s eighth
congress changed the party’s name to the Kurdistan Freedom and Democracy
Congress (KADEK).”[61]
In 2003, KADEK was renamed Kongra-Gel
(Kurdistan People’s Congress) in attempt to distance itself from its
image as a terrorist organization and in order to pursue a peaceful
political course. However, the move was unsuccessful, and the PKK
returned to its original name in 2008. In the following years, the PKK
and the Turkish government held secret talks in Oslo, Norway, for the
first time in three decades. Nonetheless, the talks failed in 2011.
“The PKK’s July 23 to August 12, 2012,
armed campaign in the Semdinli region of the Hakkari Province on the
Iran-Iraq border was of unprecedented magnitude. The PKK allegedly
attempted to place a town under siege and challenged the government in a
conventional battle. The PKK said it was implementing a new tactic of
holding territory inside the country.”[62]
It succeeded to force the Turkish army into their posts and “hold a
150-mile long border region with Iraq, establishing several checkpoints
around the Kurdish cities.”[63]
The PKK fought with heavy weapons in the battle, considered to be one
of the bloodiest and most sustained confrontations since the conflict
began in 1984.
As of March 21, 2013, the PKK and
Turkey’s government have held talks in order to find a political
solution to Kurdish conflict. A bilateral ceasefire was reached, though
Turkish authorities deny this. On April 25, 2013, the PKK’s acting
leader at the time, Murat Karayilan, told a crowd of journalists in the
Qandil Mountains that “their forces would withdraw from Turkey starting
on May 8, 2013–as pledged in the ongoing negotiations between Ocalan and
the Turkish government.”[64]
According to Aliza Marcus, a leading scholar on the organization, “the
PKK enjoys the support of the majority of Kurds in southeast Turkey and
among national-minded Kurds.”[65]
Other senior PKK figures include Cemil
Bayik, Mustafa Karasu, Sabri Ok, Ali Haydar Kaytan, Duran Kalkan,
Beritan Dersim, Sulbus Peri, Delal Amed, Rengin Botan, Sozdar Avesta,
Bese Hozat, Ronahi Serhat, Riza Altun, Bahoz Erdal, and Nurettin Sofi.
Moreover, the PKK is considered the dominant Kurdish movement in Syrian
and Iranian Kurdistan as well as in the diaspora. The PKK runs several
NGOs and hundreds of community centers worldwide, including in Japan,
Canada, Russia, Australia, South Africa, and in Scandinavia. There are
also a number of private television and radio stations and publications
in Europe that are closely related to the PKK. The PKK, with its
millions of supporters, is undoubtedly the best organized Kurdish
movement in the world economically, politically, and socially.
The Peace and Democracy Party (BDP)
The Peace and Democracy Party (BDP) is
the eighth successive Kurdish political party in Turkey. Its goal is to
find a democratic solution to the Kurdish problem in Turkey through
peaceful means in order to secure the fundamental rights of the Kurds.
All of its predecessors were outlawed by Turkey’s Constitutional Court.
“The first pro-Kurdish party was the People’s Labor Party (Halkin Emek
Partisi, HEP), established on June 7, 1990, by Fehmi Isiklar and nine
other Kurdish MPs in Turkey.”[66]
“The HEP joined the Social Democrat Party (SHP) for Turkey’s 1991
general elections and gained 22 seats in the Turkish Grand Assembly. In
July 1993, the HEP was banned by Turkey’s Constitutional Court.”[67]
Following its disbandment, “Kurdish MPs
founded the Freedom and Democracy Party (OZDEP) in May 1993. On November
23, OZDEP was also outlawed and was succeeded by the Democracy Party
(DEP). In March 1994, the Turkish parliament lifted the immunity of six
DEP MPs, including the first Kurdish female MP, Leyla Zana.”[68]
“They were later sentenced to 15 years in prison on charges of treason
and affiliation with the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK). Other members
escaped to Europe and joined the establishment of the Kurdistan
Parliament in Exile in Brussels. On June 16, 1994, the DEP was disbanded
by the Constitutional Court.”[69]
With each banned Kurdish party, a
substitute party was formed. The People’s Democracy Party (HADEP) was
founded on May 11, 1994, with Murat Bozlak as the elected leader. HADEP
was the first Kurdish party to participate in the 1995 and 1999
elections. It did not, however, meet the 10 percent required threshold
and thus did not win any seats–although it was dominant party in the
Kurdish region. In the 1999 local elections, it won 37 municipalities
across the Kurdish region, including seven major Kurdish cities. Yet
HADEP’s fate was the same as its predecessors, and it was outlawed by
the Turkish Constitutional Court on March 13, 2003. In addition, 46 of
its founding members were banned from political activities.
Next, the Democratic People’s Party
(DEHAP) was established. DEHAP gained around seven percent of the total
votes in Turkey in 2002. Despite its total votes numbering around three
million, which could have translated to more than 30 MPs, it did not
succeed in entering the Turkish parliament. “The Constitutional Court
opened a case against the DEHAP, but the party later merged with the
Democratic Society Party (DTP) led by veteran Kurdish politician Ahmet
Turk”[70]
and Aysel Tugluk, one of Ocalan’s lawyers. The DTP did not participate
in the 2007 elections, but its candidates ran independently. It secured
22 seats in the Turkish parliament on its first attempt and was accused
by the Turkish government of being a political wing of the PKK.
In the 2009 local elections, the DTP won
mayorships in 100 cities and towns in the Kurdish region. The party was
banned by Turkey’s Constitutional Court on December 11, 2009. In
addition, its co-chairs, Turk and Tugluk, were stripped of their
parliamentary immunity and barred from membership in any political party
for five years.
The Peace and Democracy Party (BDP) was
created in 2008, before the DTP was closed, and many Kurdish MPs joined.
BDP candidates ran independently as well, and the party secured 36
seats in the Grand National Assembly of Turkey. Six of its elected MPs
are, as of the writing of this article, still in Turkish jails. The
party advocates human and minority rights and has equal representation
at all administrative levels in and municipalities it holds. Its
co-chairs are Selahattin Demirtas (male) and Gulten Kisanak (female). It
is also the only party that openly supports the rights of gays and
lesbians, as outlined in its program.[71] Moreover, the BDP has offices and representatives in Washington, Brussels, Paris, Erbil (Hewler), and Rome.
Party of Rights and Freedom (HAKPAR)
Party of Rights and Freedom (HAKPAR) was
established by Abdulmelik Firat, former member of Democratic Party in
Turkey in a move to counter PKK related Kurdish parties in the region.
Party is now led by Kemal Burkay the former secretary general of
Kurdistan Socialist party (PSK) who returned from Europe after spending
30 years there. Its public support is almost nonexistent due to Burkay’s
ties with the Turkish government and his dislike toward the BDP and the
PKK.
Party of Participatory Democracy (KADEP)
KADEP was founded by Serafettin Elci,
who had served as minister of agriculture in the 1970s in Turkey. The
party advocates Kurdish nationalism and has good relations with the
Kurdistan Democratic Party in Iraq. Elci was elected to the Turkish
parliament in 2011, following his coalition with the Peace and Democracy
Party (BDP); however, he passed away in 2012. Lutfi Baksi is the
current KADEP leader. The party wields no real power in the region.
INTERNATIONAL
The Kurdistan Communities Union (KCK)
The Kurdistan Communities Union (KCK) is
an umbrella organization that encompasses all of the PKK-affiliated
parties and organizations in Kurdistan. “The establishment of KCK is
based on the principle of ‘democratic confederalism’ proposed by
Abdullah Ocalan in 2004.” Ocalan suggested the concept “as an
alternative to the nation state and as a model for resolving conflicts
in the Middle East. Within this framework, the KCK serves as an
executive organ coordinating with the PKK and PKK-affiliated parties and
organizations operating in other Kurdish regions.”[72]
Abdullah Ocalan is the group’s honorary
leader, however, due to his imprisonment, the organization is led by an
elected executive council. “Cemil Bayik, now the acting leader of the
Kurdistan Workers’ Party who replaced Murat Karayilan in July 2013, is
the current co-chair of the KCK Executive Council along with Bese Hozat,
a leading female commander in the PKK.” [73]
Murat Karayilan, the former head of KCK; “Zubeyir Aydar, a former
Kurdish member of the Turkish parliament in the 1990s and a leading
member of the Kurdistan National Congress (KNK) are the deputies of
Bayik and Hozat.”[74]
Kongra-Gel (Kurdistan People’s Congress), the KCK’s assembly, is led by
Dr. Remzi Kartal, who served as a member of the Turkish parliament in
the 1990s.
“The KCK has five main subdivisions: the
ideological front, social front, political front, military wing, and
the women’s front.”[75]
In addition to the PKK, political parties such as the Free Life Party
of Kurdistan (Partiya Jiyana Azad a Kurdistane, PJAK), active in Iranian
Kurdistan; the Democratic Union Party (Partiya Yekiti a Demokratik,
PYD), operating in Syrian Kurdistan; the Kurdistan Democratic Solution
Party (Partiya Carseravi Demokratik Kurdistan, PCDK) in Iraqi Kurdistan,
civil society organizations in Kurdistan; the PKK’s armed wing; and the
People’s Defense Forces (HPG).
The Confederation of Kurdish Associations in Europe (KON-KURD)
“The Confederation of Kurdish
Associations in Europe (KON-KURD) is an international organization
located in Brussels whose goal is to achieve, defend, and develop the
social, economic, political, and cultural rights of the Kurdish people.
KON-KURD works within the democratic framework that exists in Europe.”[76]
KON-KURD is another umbrella organization of the Kurdish community
centers linked to the PKK in Europe, North America, and Australia.
Around 200 groups from across the globe are members, and the
organization is represented by the Kurdish federations and associations
in all European countries.
The federation of Kurdish associations
in Germany is YEK-KOM. With approximately one hundred member
associations, it is the largest of all. The federation in Austria is
FEY-KOM; Great Britain’s is FED-BIR; Belgium’s is FEK-BEL; in Denmark,
it is FEY-KURD; “in France FEYKA; in the Netherlands FED-KOM; in Sweden
KURDISKA-RADET; and in Switzerland FEKAR.”[77]
All are members of KON-KURD, which is headed by Ismet Kem, a former
Kurdish journalist who has lived in Europe for many years. At its 19th
Congress in Brussels in June 2013, KON-KURD changed its name to
KCD-Europe (Kurdish Democratic Society Congress in Europe). As of the
writing of this article, the new chair/co-chairs of KCD have yet to be
announced.
Kurdistan National Congress (KNK)
The Kurdistan National Congress (Kongra
Netawiya Kurdistan, KNK) was established in 1999 as the successor of the
Kurdistan Parliament in Exile by exiled Kurdish and Assyrian
politicians, lawyers, and activists. “It is a coalition of organizations
from across Europe and Kurdistan… working to promote and lobby for a
peaceful political solution to the Kurdish question.”[78] The KNK headquarters are located in Brussels, with branches in several other major European cities as well. [79]
KNK’s objective is “to bring together
the representatives of the Kurds from across the Kurdish regions to
lobby foreign governments, the EU, the UN, and other international
organizations in order to raise awareness of the situation in Kurdistan
through the media briefings and in public forums. In addition, KNK
“works with politicians, human rights groups, and NGOs to bring
attention to political issues and human rights violations in Kurdistan.
The KNK is co-chaired by Tahir Kamalizadeh, a prominent Kurd from
Iranian Kurdistan and Nilufer.”[80]
The Kurdistan National Congress of North America (KNCNA)
The Kurdish National Congress of North
America (KNCNA) was established in 1988 in the aftermath of the Iraq’s
chemical weapons attacks on Halabja and other Kurdish cities and
villages Artin. Based in Irvine, California, the organization represents
Kurds from all parts of Kurdistan living in the United States and
Canada.[81]
The KNCNA,’s main objective is “to unite Kurds living in North America
to work toward a better future” and to promote a free and democratic
Kurdistan.[82] The KNCNA is not to be confused with the Brussels-based Kurdistan National Congress (KNK or Kongra Netewiya Kurdistan).
CONCLUSION
While the Kurds do not yet have an
independent state, some of the most important developments in modern
Kurdish history have taken place over the past decade. With the
emergence of Iraqi Kurdistan following the 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq,
the Kurds came to control the region where they lived in the country,
and in 2005, a Kurd was elected president of Iraq. Another significant
development was on the level of international cooperation, with the
Kurdistan National Congress’ (KNK) 13th General Assembly
being held in Brussels in May 2013. There, for the first time, the KRG
was represented among 200 delegates from various Kurdish parties and
organizations. The event was broadcast live on all of the major Kurdish
TV channels, including Kurdistan TV, Nuce TV, Kurdsat, and Sterk TV.
The Kurds have seen major progress in
Iraq, where they have a de facto autonomous region, and they are also
attempting to carve out autonomy in Syria as well. In Turkey, too, there
have been new political openings. Only in Iran has the situation
remained stagnant.
*Rodi Hevian is a Kurdish journalist.
He is also in the Peace and Conflict Studies graduate studies program
at the University of Haifa International School. He specializes in
Kurdish Politics. He holds a B.A. in International Economics from
Megatrend University Belgrade.
NOTES
[1] Michael M. Gunter, From A to Z of the Kurds (Lanham, MD; Toronto; Plymouth, UK: Scarecrow Press, Inc., 2009), p. xxxiii.
[2] Ibid.
[3] Kerim Yildiz, The Kurds in Iraq: The Past, Present and Future (London: Pluto Press & Kurdish Human Rights Project, 2007), p. 1.
[4] Carl Dahlman, “The Political Geography of Kurdistan,” Eurasian Geography and Economics, Vol. 43, No. 4, pp. 271–99, (May 2002).
[5] Yildiz, The Kurds in Iraq, p. 86-87.
[6] Michael M. Gunter, “The Kurdistan Democratic Party of Iran,” in Gunter, From A to Z of the Kurds.
[7] Yildiz, The Kurds in Iraq, pp. 86-87.
[8] Peter Pilz, “Ahmadi-Nejad ist dringend tatverdächtig,” Der Standard, June 18, 2009, http://derstandard.at/1244460912632/Kurdenmord-in-Wien-Pilz-Ahmadi-Nejad-ist-dringend-tatverdaechtig.
[9] Iran Human Rights Documentation, Murder at Mykonos: Anatomy of a Political Assassination, http://www.iranhrdc.org/english/publications/reports/3150-murder-at-mykonos-anatomy-of-a-political-assassination.html
[10] PDKI, “Iranian Kurdistan and PDKI in Brief,” Democractic Party of Iranian Kurdistan Website, October 16, 2009, http://pdki.org/english/iranian-kurdistan-and-pdki-in-brief/.
[11] Fuad Haqiqi, “Iranian Kurdish Parties KDP, KDPI Meet for First Time Since 2006 Split,” Rudaw, December 14, 2012, http://www.kurdistanukurd.com/en/hewal_dreja.php?id=244.
[12] Ibid.
[13] Ibid.
[14] Gunter, From A to Z of the Kurds, p. 102.
[15] Billy Briggs, “Kurdish Women Fight for Peace,” The New Zealand Herald, April 28, 2012, http://www.nzherald.co.nz/world/news/article.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10801930.
[16] Jonathan Spyer, “Rebels Against the Pasdaran,” Global Research in International Affairs (GLORIA) Center, January 2, 2012, http://www.gloria-center.org/2012/01/rebels-against-the-pasdaran/.
[17] Kenneth R. Timmerman, Who Are the Terrorists? PJAK Is a Danger Only to the Islamic Regime,” Washington Times, June 22, 2010, http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2010/jun/22/who-are-the-terrorists/#ixzz2Rc7Hi0xo.
[18] Gunter, From A to Z of the Kurds.
[19] KRG Fact Sheet, About the Kurdistan Regional Government, Members of the Kurdistan Parliament, April 4, 2012, http://www.krg.org/uploads/documents/About_Kurdistan_Regional_Government__2012_04_10_h13m19s26.pdf.
[20] Anthony H. Cordesman, The Real Results of the Iraqi Elections, By July 2010, in Early 2011, or Years Later? April 6, 2010, Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), Arleigh A. Burke Chair in Strategy.
[21] Gunter, From A to Z of the Kurds, p. 163.
[22] “Timeline: Iraqi Kurds,” BBC News, April 19, 2011, http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/country_profiles/2893067.stm.
[23] Gunter, From A to Z of the Kurds, p. 164.
[24] “New Kurdish Party to Challenge Polls, BBC News, March 6, 2010, http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/from_our_own_correspondent/8553321.stm.
[25] Patrick Cockburn, “Reformist Gains in Kurdish Vote Shake Iraq’s Quiet North,” The Independent, July 27, 2009, http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/reformist-gains-in-kurdish-vote-shake-iraqs-quiet-north-1762060.html.
[26] “Goran Leaves Iraq’s Kurdish Alliance with Less Clout,” al-Arabiya, October 30, 2010, http://www.alarabiya.net/articles/2010/10/30/124259.html; Sam Dagher, “Opposition Rattles a Governing Coalition in Iraqi Kurds’ Vote,” New York Times, July 26, 2009, http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/27/world/middleeast/27kurds.html.
[27] Nashirwan Mustafa, “Open Letter from Nawshirwan Mustafa to Gorrans Parliamentarians in Kurdistan Parliament,” Gorran.net, January 31, 2012, http://www.gorran.net/en/Detail.aspx?id=57 (accessed April 28, 2013).
[28] “PKK’s Affiliate Kurdish PCDK Party Leader Denies Secret Meeting with Baghdad,” Rudaw.net, October 27, 2012, http://www.ekurd.net/mismas/articles/misc2012/10/state6588.htm.
[29] “Kurdistan Islamic Union,” Berkley Center for Religion, Peace, and World Affairs, Georgetown University, http://berkleycenter.georgetown.edu/resources/organizations/kurdistan-islamic-union (accessed May 1, 2013).
[30] Ibid.
[31] Ibid.
[32] Bushra Juhi, “Crowds Rampage in Iraqi Kurdish City After Sermons,” The Independent, December 3, 2011, http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/crowds-rampage-in-iraqi-kurdish-city-after-sermons-6271727.html.
[33] Michael Weiss, “Syrian Kurd Leader: Revolution Won’t Succeed Without Minorities,” The Atlantic, January 20, 2012, http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2012/01/syrian-kurd-leader-revolution-wont-succeed-without-minorities/251660/;
“The Kurdish Democratic Party in Syria (al-Parti),” Carnegie Middle
East Center, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, February 20,
2012, http://carnegie-mec.org/publications/?fa=48360.
[34] “The Kurdish Democratic Party in Syria (al-Parti).”
[35] “The Kurdish Democratic Union Party,” Carnegie, March 1, 2012, http://carnegie-mec.org/publications/?fa=48526.
[36] Report: Kurds in Syria: Groups at Risk and Reactions Against Political Activists, (Oslo: Landinfo: The Country of Origin Information Center, June 16, 2010).
[37]
“The Political Program 2009: Yekiti Kurdish Party in Syria: The
Political Programme (Amended and approved by the Sixth Conference),
December 2009,” Yekiti Media, August 21, 2009, http://yekiti-media.org/nuce.php?z=&id=33&z=en.
[38] Dildar Aryen, “Armed Group That Operate Around Afrin and Aleppo,” November 1, 2012, http://www.firatnews.com/news/kurdistan/halep-ve-afrin-de-hangi-silahly-gruplar-var.htm.
[39] Serhat Erkmen, “Kurdish Movements in Syria,” Orsam Report, No. 127, Center for Middle Eastern Strategic Studies Orsam, Ankara, Turkey, (August 2012), p. 14-47.
[40] Ibid.
[41] “ENKS: Emê hêzek çekdar ava bikin,” Rudaw, http://rudaw.net/kurmanci/kurdistan/3004201310?keyword=cuma, (accessed May 1, 2013).
[42] Jonathan Spyer, “Amid Syria’s Atrocities, Kurds Scratch Out a Home,” The Atlantic, April 2, 2013, http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2013/04/amid-syrias-atrocities-kurds-scratch-out-a-home/274573/.
[43] “The Kurdish Democratic Union Party.”
[44] “‘We Decided to Be Soldiers for Our People, Not Anyone Else’: PYD Leader,” Kurdistan Tribune, November 17, 2012, http://kurdistantribune.com/2012/decided-be-soldiers-for-people-not-anyone-else-pyd-leader/.
[45] “The Kurdish Democratic Union Party.”
[46] Report: Kurds in Syria: Groups at Risk.
[47] Ibid.
[48]
John Caves, “Backgrounder: Syrian Kurds and the Democratic Union Party
(PYD),” ISW-Institute for the Study of War, December 6, 2012, http://www.understandingwar.org/sites/default/files/Backgrounder_SyrianKurds.pdf.
[49] “Syria’s Kurds: A Struggle within a Struggle,” International Crisis Group Middle East Report, No. 136, January 22, 2013.
[50] “Kurdish Movements in Syria,”
[51] “Syria’s Kurds: A Struggle within a Struggle.”
[52] “The Kurdish National Council KNC,” Carnegie Middle East, http://carnegie-mec.org/publications/?fa=48502 (accessed May 25, 2013).
[53] “The Kurdish National Council KNC,” Carnegie Middle East, http://carnegie-mec.org/publications/?fa=48502 (accessed May 25, 2013).
[54] Kariane Westrheim, Journal for Critical Education Policy Studies, Vol. 6, No. 1 (May 2008), p. 1.
[55] Nihat A. Özcan, Turkey’s Kurds: A Theoretical Analysis of the PKK and Abdullah Öcalan (London: Routledge, 2005), p. 84.
[56] Yildiz, The Kurds in Iraq, p. 14.
[57] Ahmet Kahraman, Uprising, Suppression, Retribution; The Kurdish Struggle in Turkey in the 21st Century (London: Parvana, 2007), p. 245.
[58] Susan Breau and Kerim Yildiz, The Kurdish Conflict: International Humanitarian Law and Post-Conflict Mechanisms (London: Routledge, 2009).
[59] Ahmad Janabi, “Profile: Abdullah Öcalan,” al-Jazeera, February 25, 2008, http://www.aljazeera.com/news/middleeast/2008/02/200852518354488631.html.
[60] David Cutler, “Timeline: Kurdish Militant Group PKK’s Three-Decade War with Turkey,” Reuters, April 25, 2013, http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/04/25/us-turkey-kurds-dates-idUSBRE93O0RL20130425.
[61] Gunter, From A to Z of the Kurds, p. 121.
[62] Cengiz Candar, “Turkey’s Dual Challenge: The Kurdish Question and Syria,” Democratic Progressive Institute, December 2012.
[63] Jake Hess, “Turkey’s PKK Talks,” Foreign Policy, January 8, 2013, (accessed May 1, 2013) http://mideast.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2013/01/08/turkeys_kurdish_opening#.UOxuRPEPGSY.tumblr.
[64] Dorian Jones, “The PKK Sets Date for Withdrawal from Turkey, Voice of America,” http://www.voanews.com/content/pkk-sets-date-for-withdrawal-from-turkey/1649060.html (accessed April 25, 2013).
[65] Hess, “Turkey’s PKK Talks.”
[66] “DTP Was Closed Down by the Constitutional Court,” NTVMSNBC, December 11, 2009, http://www.ntvmsnbc.com/id/25029246/
[67] Gunter, “The Democracy Party (DEP),” in Gunter, From A to Z of the Kurds, p. 38.
[68] Ibid.
[69] Gunter, “The Democracy Party (DEP),” in Gunter, From A to Z of the Kurds, p. 38.
[70] Ibid, p. 39.
[71] Göksel Bozkurt, “New Constitution and BDP’s Red Lines,” Hurriyet Daily News, http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/new-constitution-and-bdps-red-lines.aspx?pageID=238&nID=45816&NewsCatID=342 (accessed May 1, 2013).
[72] Ibid.
[73] Cimen Ahmet, “New Era in the KCK with New Changes,” Firat News Agency, July, 10, 2013, http://www.firatnews.com/news/guncel/kck-sisteminde-degisiklige-gidildi.htm.
[74] Düzel Nese, “Zübeyir Aydar: ‘Military Operations Are Going to Begin,’” Taraf Daily, April 5, 2010, http://www.kurdishaspect.com/doc042910ZA.html (accessed April 25, 2013).
[75] “Backgrounder on the Union of Communities in Kurdistan, KCK,” http://www.tuerkeiforum.net//enw/index.php?title=Special:Book&bookcmd=download&collection_id=5baf9a2446414093&writer=rl&return_to=Backgrounder+on+the+Union+of+Communities+in+Kurdistan%2C+KCK.
[76] “The Relationship Between Fed-Bir and KON-KURD,” Fed-Bir, http://www.fedbir.co.uk/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=24&Itemid=30 (accessed May 23, 2013).
[77] Gunter From A to Z of the Kurds.
[78] Michael M. Gunter, “Kurdistan National Congress, KNK,” in Gunter, From A to Z of the Kurds, p. 110.
[79] “Kurdistan National Congress KNK,” Peace in Kurdistan Campaign, http://peaceinkurdistancampaign.wordpress.com/resources/kurdish-national-congress-knk/ (accessed April 25, 2013).
[80] Ibid.
[81] “What Is the Kurdish National Congress of North America,” Kurdistan National Congress of North America Website, http://www.kncna.net/about_us, (accessed May 2, 2013).
Source: http://www.gloria-center.org/2013/08/the-main-kurdish-political-parties-in-iran-iraq-syria-and-turkey-a-research-guide/
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