100 years of hope, struggle and betrayal

NEW INTERNATIONALIST

Kurdish leader Mustafa Barzani (‘father of Kurdish nationalism’) and his fighters launched rebellions against successive Iraqi regimes from the 1940s onwards. PHOTO/Jan M Sefti/CC license

The Kurdish quest for freedom and independence has been long, dramatic and complicated. Here’s a potted history of the past century.

1920

Secretly negotiated by Britain and France, the 1916 Sykes-Picot Agreement draws up plans for the modern Middle East. After World War One, the 1920 Treaty of Sèvres dissolves the defeated Ottoman empire and proposes the creation of an autonomous Kurdish state. But Turkey’s new leader, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, rejects Sèvres. The 1923 Treaty of Lausanne, negotiated by the Allies with Turkey, makes no refence to a Kurdish homeland. The opportunity is lost and the Kurds are dispersed over the newly delineated states of Iran, Iraq, Syria and Turkey. A major Kurdish rebellion around Mount Ararat is crushed in 1930.

1946

In January 1946, Iranian Kurds establish the Republic of Mahabad, a short-lived independent state in the Kurdish-inhabited areas that came under Soviet control during World War Two. While in exile in Mahabad, the Iraqi tribal chief Mustafa Barzani – dubbed the ‘father of Kurdish nationalism’ – creates the Kurdish Democratic Party of Iraq (KDP). After the Soviet withdrawal in December 1946, Iran reoccupies Mahabad.

1961

In Iraq, prime minister Abd al-Karim Qasim reneges on promises of autonomy and the Kurds launch a rebellion that continues through successive regimes. In 1970 the new Ba’athist government makes plans for Kurdish autonomy but they are not implemented and fighting resumes in 1974.

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