sayinqella

This site attempts to contribute to the mutual respect and understanding between Kurds and Azerbaijani Turks

Thursday, August 24, 2006

GAMOH is critisized, but not for its racist positions!

GAMOH is critisized, But not for its racist positions!
In the past few weeks some of the Azerbaycani related blogs and sites have published articles , which contain critisizm about the totalirarian approaches of GAMOH concerning the struggle of Azerbaycani Turkish people.
GAMOH is accused of confiscation of the struggle for sectarian interests and imposing its will on the others, more over it is alleged that GAMOH has no tolerance vis-a-vis other ideas and formations.
In three critically written articles that I have seen there is no
mention to the baseless and slandrous approach of GAMOH to the struggle of Kurdish people in Eastern Kurdistan and other
parts.
The democratically minded Azerbaycani formations are expected to have a clear position vis-a-vis the none-constructive approach of GAMOH to Kurdish questin.

Thursday, August 17, 2006

WELL DONE ASMEK

WELL DONE ASMEK
ASMEK is The Defence Committee of Azerbaycan Political Prisoners (Azerbaycan Siyasal Mehbuslarin Mudafie Komitesi,
Which regularly informs the public opinion about the plight Azerbaycani Political prisoners. ASMEK in its latest news release have published the list of 36 prisoners who are held under appauling conditions in Islamic Republic prisons.
Most of the people included in ASMEK's list are defenders of distinct Azerbaycani identity , who were arrested during and after this year's uprising.
You can visit ASMEK's blog at the following address:
http://asmek.blogfa.com

Tuesday, August 15, 2006

An objective and sound approach is imparartive

An objective and sound approach is imparative!
Some months ago there were some correspondense exchange between Mustefa Hecri the present General Secretary of Iranian KDP and a certain Dr. Amir Afshar who claims to represent some current within the Southern Azerbaycani Movement.
The way Mr.Hecri approached the arguments by Dr.Afshar in many poits were not satisfactory to vast majority of Kurds, even within his own rand in KDP-I
In a recent statement published by a group of dissidents of KDP, they ask Mr. Hicri to renounce his postions taken in letters to Mr. Amir Afshar.
Although this demand to certain degree is legitimate, but when it comes to defining the territory , their position is one-sided,
Because they name the whole present Western-Azerbaycan as Kurdistan. Such claims adds to the fuel of misunderstanding between the two people.
In reality present Western-Azerbaycan could be divided into
three sectins. one Section is clearly Kurdish and should be part of Kurdish territory. The othe section is clearly Azerbaycani and it should be recognised as such.
There is a third section which is a mixed area populated by the two people and should be considered as common territory.
The like minded Kurds and Azerbaycani Turks should think about how to promote mtual respect and mutual understanding which may be a focus for dispute in future.

Sunday, August 13, 2006

FRIENDSHIP IS THE ONLY WAY

The following statement by a Kurdish intellectual have been published some time before Azerbaycani uprising.
we repost it here for those callers who may have not seen it before!
Ethnic conflict between Azerbaijanis and Kurds pave the way for bloodshed

4/24/2006 - Article - KurdishMedia.com - By : HEJAR present political atmosphere, neither Kurds nor Azerbaijanis are determining their own destiny. Therefore there is no need for engaging in disputes over territorial integrity.

A community of Kurds have lived in northern part of Eastern (Iranian) Kurdistan as far back as history has been recorded and from a political and ethnic perspectives, they rightly consider these regions as part of their own land, Eastern Kurdistan, whilst the Azerbaijani Turkish people consider these regions as part of the Western Azerbaijan province ,in Southern Azerbaijan. These two Kurdish and Azerbaycani Turkish communities have lived in these ethnically mixed regions for centuries. In present political atmosphere, neither Kurds nor Azerbaijani Turks determine their own destiny. Therefore there is no need for engaging in disputes over territory. A sustained and sincere effort should be made to achieve mutual benefit for both communities. Territorial issue can wait for the future, when a viable solution could be found through democratic dialogue and mutual understanding. To meet this task, not only the political forces which represent each community, but also Kurdish and Azerbaijani Turk individuals or other ethnicities and communities should take part in the pursuing peaceful ways of solving these problems. After the events of last February in Maku and its surroundings, an anti-Kurdish campaign, have started by some circles and pumped up through Gunaz TV channel. One of outcomes of such anti-Kurdish campaign has been a petition which is addressed to Kofi Annan, the General Secretary of UN. This petition is posted in an Azerbaijani related site and reads as the following. "To: UN The Honourable Secretary General of UN Kofi Annan, Demonstrations held by Kurdish terrorist groups in the southern Azerbaijani city of Maku. These dangerous actions threaten stability in the region. On 16 February 2006, several Azerbaijani Turks lost their lives in an attack by a terrorist organization, known as the PKK (Kurdistan Workers Party), in South Azerbaijan, an area located in the North West of the so-called of Iran. PJAK, a related Iranian faction of the PKK, had organised a protest to mark the 7th anniversary of the capture of the PKK's founder, Abdullah Ocalan, in the southern Azerbaijani city of Maku. Kurds who were brought from Kurdish regions to Maku chanted anti-Turkish slogans and attacked civilians. In this demonstration, Azerbaijani Turks were targeted and several Azeris lost their lives. According to information received from city of Maku, the majority of the Kurds who participated in these attacks were not locals. They were Kurds from Kurdish cities such as Sanadaj, Soleymaniyeh, and some Kurdish cities of Turkey, who were brought to spread terror in the Azerbaijani region. These incidents originate from the claims of Kurdish leaders to some parts of southern Azerbaijan. The Democratic Party of Kurdistan - Iranian (KDP-I) claims the south Azerbaijani cities which is evidence in the news, maps and reports the KDP-I publish. Furthermore, the PKK conducts terrorist activities in Azerbaijani cities trying to show their presence in this region. We ask for immediate attention to the unrest created by the alien terrorist groups of PKK and KDP-I. This is not the first time that Kurdish terrorist groups have committed atrocities in Azerbaijani regions. Atrocities committed by the Kurdish militia were started by Ismail Simitko, who massacred thousands of Azerbaijani Turks in present-days of southern Azerbaijan from 1920 to 1921. Also in the 1980s, both terrorist organizations of the Kurdistan Democratic Party - Iranian and Komoleh have killed and terrorised hundreds of innocent people in Sulduz (Naghadeh). Kurdish parties still do not respect the territorial rights of the Azerbaijani people and continue to claim parts of this region. We urge you to condemn these acts of terrorism committed by the PKK, and would like to call the attention of the international community to the anti-Turk Kurdish terrorism in this Azerbaijani region. Thank you for your attention to this matter. Sincerely, The Undersigned” The idea behind such petition is clear. It seeks to incite racial hatred between Kurdish and Azerbaijani Turks. In the events of Maku, a number of unarmed innocent Kurdish protesters were perished and if some person among the armed security forces had lost their lives, their ethnic identity would have not change anything. The organisations that work in Eastern Kurdistan, without compromising the rights of Kurds to territory must pursue a clear and concrete policy. They should expose the cheap propaganda and plots of pan Turanists who are the clear enemy of the noble Azerbaijani Turkish people and Kurds alike. The sensitivities of the area should be taken into account, and a sustained effort should be pursued for understanding, dialogue and mutual respect. It is the clear right of both peoples to live in their in these lands together

Still actual !

Updated: 02 Jun 2006
Iran politics: Uppity minorities


COUNTRY BRIEFING
FROM THE ECONOMIST
Unrest in the provinces is rattling the government at the centre
THE Islamic Republic's culture minister is under the cosh for reacting tardily to last month's publication of a cartoon, showing a cockroach speaking Azeri Turkish, which sparked rioting across Iran's Azeri-dominated north-west (see map). Members of the Majlis, Iran's parliament, have threatened to impeach Mustafa Pourmohammadi, the interior minister, for failing to stem lawlessness in the part-Baluch south-east. Cast an eye over western Iran's troubled Kurdish and Arab regions and you may concur with Rahim Shahbazi, an Azeri nationalist based in America, who calls ethnic strife a "nuclear bomb that will blow away the Iranian regime".
Several days of protests by Iranian Azeris peaked on May 25th, when four demonstrators were killed in the part-Azeri town of Naghadeh. Many Azeris, the biggest minority in a country dominated by ethnic Persians, had not been placated by the banning of the government-owned newspaper in which the offending cartoon appeared, nor by the arrest of the cartoonist and an editor. The killings were only fleetingly acknowledged by the authorities. An official account was hastily withdrawn from the newswire where it was posted.
Iran's Azeris, (perhaps 16m-strong in a population of 70m-plus) are mostly Shia Muslim and have not, compared to Sunni minorities, done badly out of the (Shia) Islamic Republic. Though schooling in Azeri is not permitted and the constitution bans private broadcasting in any language, intermarriage with Persians is widespread and Azeris are well represented in Iran's trading and bureaucratic elite. From the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei (himself of Azeri origin) downwards, Iranian officials have blamed the recent unrest on foreign "enemies".
At a time when the American government is looking for Iranian opposition groups to support, many Iranians believe such claims. Some Azeri nationalists in neighbouring Azerbaijan and others in America used the internet, radio and television broadcasts to incite protesters during the unrest. By contrast, neighbouring Turkey, which also casts a protective eye over its cousins in Iran, kept mum.
Turkey's restraint is partly due to shared interests. Kurdish minorities straddle the border. Emboldened by the autonomy now enjoyed by Iraq's Kurds, and dispirited by their own nationalist parties, some Iranian Kurds were thrilled last year when Abdullah Ocalan, the jailed leader of Turkey's Kurdish rebel movement, called for a region-wide confederation. Since then, according to Kurds from Sanandaj, the capital of the Iranian province of Kurdistan, scores of recruits have crossed into Iraq to join the Party for Free Life in Kurdistan (PJAK), an Iranian' subsidiary of Mr Ocalan's Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK). Both groups are based in northern Iraq.
Iranian Kurds, especially the Sunni majority, complain that discrimination hurts their promotion chances in the local bureaucracy. In the words of a prominent Iranian Kurdish academic, they "loathe" the state's pro-government Kurdish-language television station. Many Kurds tune in to Roj TV, which carries PJAK propaganda.
The PJAK's popularity has gone up since a Kurdish criminal suspect died at the hands of Iran's security forces last summer, causing much rioting. A Kurdish group says the security forces killed ten demonstrators in a single incident in February.
The Turks were unbothered by Iran's bombardment of suspected PJAK positions in Iraq last month. The Iranians have handed over captured PKK fighters to the Turks, and both countries recently massed troops near the border where Turkey, Iran and Iraq all meet. No government thinks it can seal these mountain border areas, a paradise for smugglers. But the Turks and Iranians aim to intimidate the PKK's Kurdish hosts in Iraq and their American overlords into reining in Mr Ocalan's cohorts.
From one side to the other
At the opposite end of the country, along Iran's border with Afghanistan and Pakistan, the security forces are also being stretched--by dozens of bandit groups and particularly by the savagery of Abdolmalek Rigi, a young Baluch who kills in cold blood in the name of his vaunted ideals, Sunni Islam and Baluchi nationalism. Iran has 4m-plus Baluchis.
Last winter, Mr Rigi's Jundullah, or Soldiers of God, kidnapped nine Iranian soldiers, one of whom they later killed. In March, they held up a convoy and slaughtered 22 people, including officials in the provincial administration of Sistan and Baluchistan. Last month, a similar raid, for which Mr Rigi did not claim responsibility, killed 12 people.
Mr Rigi, who is given publicity by some Arabic TV stations, denies that he trafficks in any of the Afghan opiates that traverse the region in vast quantities; his motives, he insists, are political. According to Mr Pourmohammadi, he flees into Pakistani Baluchistan, where President Pervez Musharraf is struggling to put down an insurgency of his own, with impunity.
In the case of Mr Rigi's attacks, and a series of bomb blasts over the past year in the part-Arab province of Khuzestan, which borders southern Iraq, the Iranians at first blamed the British and Americans--without offering proof. Moreover, the Iranians' lightning response to such atrocities does not suggest painstaking detective work. Not all Iranians were convinced, for instance, by the broadcast confessions of two Arabs later executed for alleged involvement in the blasts in Khuzestan, home to some 2m Arab Iranians. Mr Rigi has appeared on foreign channels to rebut Iranian claims that he has been killed.
Amid daily boasts of captures, deaths and brilliant punitive operations, Iranian officials never admit the role of chronic unemployment and poverty, not to mention Iran's institutionalised distrust of minorities, in stoking the unrest. In Sanandaj, for instance, university graduates may find themselves choosing between manual labour and a life in the hills with PJAK. "Is it surprising", the academic asks, "that some choose the latter?" It certainly deters would-be investors. Rio Tinto, an Anglo-Australian mining company, recently said it was withdrawing from a gold-mining project in Kurdistan.
"In these cases of minority unrest," observes a seasoned diplomat from a country bordering Iran, "you see the effects of America's invasion of Afghanistan and Iraq." Sandwiched between countries in a state of flux, whose own minorities sense an opportunity, Iran's border areas are vulnerable. Crucially, though, the instability has yet to affect Iran's populous central areas, where Persians are a big majority.
In a fractious discussion among Iranian exiles last winter at the American Enterprise Institute, a right-wing think-tank in Washington, it was plain that Iran's mainstream opposition groups are as hostile to minority irredentism as the Islamic Republic is. For all the unrest around its edges, Iran's heartland remains strong, centralised, and unsympathetic to uppity minorities. Iran's nuclear bomb, if it comes, is unlikely to be aimed inwards.

SOURCE: The Economist

Wednesday, August 09, 2006

In avoiding rupture

In avoiding rupture
This is the heading of an article written in persian and published in Kurdish monthly review Mahabd (Issue 63, June 2006)by Turkish ( Azerbaycani Turkish) cultural activist Qurban Ebbasi. Ebbasi in this highly welcomed article consentrates on the numerous factors which bonds the two people together. By his arguments, he rejects ethnical division as a borderline for conflict and flags for the humanisation of the issue. Let us read togethet parts of his article in English translation:

".... Turks [Azerbaycani Turks] and kurds in their long history have lived together in peace and joy side by side , They have never been
in need to be monitored by Peace-keeping institutions .
If a forgiveness is expected , who must forgive whom ? If The Kurdish nation is expected to be accountable for some deeds that some Turkish friends insisting upon, though who are expected to pay the account for the massacres perpetuated By Mohamad khan Qajar in Teblisi and safavi king ,Shah Abbas ?...
A group of people are busy with surveying maps, they are after nothing , they are fighting nothing. the Time no doubt is going to punish
them. Decard was right in saying that those who are not moving in accordance with time ,they will be punished . One they the one who
is residing in Chicago , totally losing his mind by repeating the nonsense of oone centurey ago , makes KURDISTAN , Azerbaycan and the other one speaking of Iraqi Kurdisatan publishes the map of Greater Kurdistan......"

Sunday, August 06, 2006

PJAK AND AZERBAYXAN UPRISING

PJAK AND AZERBAYCAN UPRISING
Among the poltical formations in Eastern Kurdistan, Party Jiyani Azadi Kurdistan (PJAK) vigorously condemned the humilating
policies of Iranian government against the Azerbaycani Turkish masses. In a statement issued by PJAK's coordination committee
on 31 May 2006 , PJAK by analysing the causes of national oppression called for an immidiate halt of animosity against non-persians in Iran.
The following is an excerpt of PJAK's statement in English .
... " Historically , the two peoples kurds and Azeries have had common interests.They both have attached great importance to their coexistance , and whenever any tension or misunderstanding have occured among them , no doubt it has been caused by divide and rule policies of ruling regimes.
We salute the democratic development of our Azeri brothers and sisters struggle and vigorously condemn the humilating and oppressive policies of Islamic Republic regime against them. we remember their heroic martyrs and ask public opinion in Eastern Kurdistan to support the democratic position of Azerbaycani People..........."

Friday, August 04, 2006

Feed back please !

Feed back please !
The aim of this blog is not just to utter words. I want Kurds and Azerbaycanini Turks to engage in the disussion, to speak about matters that they have not taken up face to face. So I am waiting for your comments. I am serious about that.

Thursday, August 03, 2006

Swedish Foreign Minister on Azerbaycan Protests

The position of Swedish Foreign Minister on Azerbaycan Protests !

Foreign minister Jan Eliasson’s answer
Answer to questions 2005/06:1814 about the Azerbaijani demonstrations and the rights of the Azerbaijanis in Iran and 1815 about Abbas Lesani and the cultural rights of the Azerbaijanis in the Islamic Republic of Iran.

Foreign minister Jan Eliasson:
Alice Åström has asked me two questions concerning the situation of the Azerbaijani population in Iran.
As well as Alice Åström I have been acquainted with reports about disturbances in the Azeri inhabited provinces in Iran. I am deeply worried about the bereavements (deaths), violence and arrestments that have occurred in connection with the demonstrations which followed the publication of some humiliating cartoons in an Iranian newspaper. This year and during last year disturbance has also occurred in other parts of Iran where ethnical minorities constitute local majorities. They as well have in several cases been crushed with outrage. In the Azeri provinces the igniting spark is considered to be the humiliating cartoons.
The situation of the ethnic- and religious minorities in Iran is far from satisfying, be it politically, socially, economically or culturally. The demonstrations in the different provinces could therefore likely bee regarded as a sign of deep discontent over lacking rights.
Sweden, as well as the EU, attaché great importance to the position of minorities. The EU regularly officially comments its worry over the lack of respect for the human rights in Iran by among other things adopting council conclusions during foreign minister meetings. The Swedish embassy, as well as remaining embassies of EU- countries, carefully follows the situation of the human rights in Iran.
I would like to remind about the conclusions from May this year, in which the situation of the minorities was criticized. In this context I would also like to remind that the EU was a co-proposal layer of the resolution which Canada last year put in front of the general assembly of the UN about the human rights in Iran. I welcome that the general assembly decided to bring the question up for further treatment later this year.


I can ensure Alice Åström that the government continuously intends to follow the situation of the Azerbaijanis in Iran with great attention.
http://riksdagen.se/webbnav/index.aspx?nid=71&rm=2005/06&nr=1815
Asked by: Alice Åström Subject: Azeri demonstrations in Iran
Iran is a multi cultural country. The population is compounded by several ethnic groups. One of the largest is the Azerbaijanis. According to official statistics they make up 24% i.e. 17 millions of the total population in Iran, whilst the United Nations estimates the Azerbaijanis to ca 30 millions i.e. ca 40 % of the population in Iran. But Iran’s official language is Persian. The language of the Azerbaijanis is closely related to Turkish and is not indo-European. Despite the fact that the Azeri population make up such a large part of Iran’s population they are exposed to harsh discrimination which among other things can be shown from the treatment of the Azerbaijani political activist and writer Abbas Lesani. Almost a century of oppression and discrimination recently started of furious demonstrations in great parts of Iran. The igniting spark was some humiliating cartoons where the Azerbaijanis were resembled to cockroaches. The regime answered to the demonstrations with brutal violence and accusations of “separatism”. But it is not reasonable to accuse a people who want to keep its dignity and demand its cultural rights to be called separatists. The forces that stir up separatism are governments that violate people’s rights and dignity.
Which initiatives does the council intend to take in order to shed light over the cultural rights of the Azerbaijanis in the UN and other international bodies?
http://riksdagen.se/webbnav/index.aspx?nid=67&dtyp=f&rm=2005/06&nr=1814
Asked by: Alice Åström Subject: The rights of the Azeri population in Iran
In article 19 in the constitution of the Islamic Republic of Iran it is declared that: “All people of Iran, whatever the ethnic group or tribe to which they belong, enjoy equal rights; and color, race, language, and the like, do not bestow any privilege.” Several different ethnic groups, such as Azerbaijanis, Persians, Kurds, Arabs, Turkmen, Baluchis, Armenians and Assyrians live in Iran. Despite what is stated in the constitution these ethnic groups are not enjoying equal rights. One example of this is how the Iranian judicial system has treated the Azeri political activist and writer Abbas Lesani. He has previously been sentenced for publishing a calendar with among other things quotes from the Iranian constitution in Azeri-Turkish. Now he is accused for separatism for participating in demonstrations against the humiliating cartoons in the Iranian Medias that is insulting towards the Azerbaijani population. In opposition with the constitution of the Islamic Republic of Iran Abbas Lesani are today living under the threat of being executed. The only thing Lesani has done is to defend his and the Azeri peoples cultural rights in Iran, which he has the right to do according to the


Iranian constitution -not questioning the Iranian state. Thus the accusation of “separatism” lacks grounds.
Which initiatives does the council intend to take to persuade the regime to respect the cultural rights of the Azeri population in the Islamic Republic of Iran?
http://riksdagen.se/webbnav/index.aspx?nid=67&dtyp=f&rm=2005/06&nr=1815

Wednesday, August 02, 2006

ALI REZA NABDEL








The great Azerbaycani poet, revolutionary and intellectual ALi Reza Nabdel was killed under torture by SAVAK agents , Shah Muhamad Reza Pahlawi's notorious Secret Police in 1972.
Nabdel had come into contact with kurdish students while studying in Law Faculety in Tehran University. His study of Kurdish question and feeling towards kurdish people, their struggle and mutual solidarity between Kurdish and Azerbaycani Turkish people are reflected in a poem, which is a masterpiece both in language and content: BU DAXLAR UCA BASH meaning these mountains are high, is a reference to the nature of Kurdistan
and a symbol for just struggle of Kurdish masszs.
In future posts we will try to publish a longer piece about Ali Reza Nabdel(Okhtay).