Kirjasto Kirjasto
Haku

Kurdipedia on suurin monikielinen lähteistä kurdien tietoja!


Search Options





Tarkennettu haku      Näppäimistö


Haku
Tarkennettu haku
Kirjasto
Kurdi nimet
Tapahtumien aikajärjestys
Lähteet
Historie
Käyttäjän Kokoelmat
Aktiviteetit
Etsi Apua?
Julkaisu
Video
Luokitukset
Satunnainen erä!
Lähetä
Send artikkel
Send bilde
Survey
Palautetta
Yhteystiedot
Millaista tietoa tarvitsemme!
Standardit
Käyttöehdot
Tuote Laatu
Työkalut
Noin
Kurdipedia Archivists
Artikkeleita meille!
Lisää Kurdipedia sivustoosi
Lisää / Poista sähköposti
Vierailijat tilastot
Erätilastot
Fonter Kalkulator
Kalenterit Muunnin
Kielet ja murteet sivut
Näppäimistö
Kätevä linkit
Kurdipedia extension for Google Chrome
Cookies
Kielet
کوردیی ناوەڕاست
کرمانجی - کوردیی سەروو
Kurmancî - Kurdîy Serû
هەورامی
Zazakî
English
Française
Deutsch
عربي
فارسی
Türkçe
Nederlands
Svenska
Español
Italiano
עברית
Pусский
Fins
Norsk
日本人
中国的
Հայերեն
Ελληνική
لەکی
Azərbaycanca
Tilini
Kirjaudu sisään
Jäsenyys!
Unohtuiko salasana!
Haku Lähetä Työkalut Kielet Tilini
Tarkennettu haku
Kirjasto
Kurdi nimet
Tapahtumien aikajärjestys
Lähteet
Historie
Käyttäjän Kokoelmat
Aktiviteetit
Etsi Apua?
Julkaisu
Video
Luokitukset
Satunnainen erä!
Send artikkel
Send bilde
Survey
Palautetta
Yhteystiedot
Millaista tietoa tarvitsemme!
Standardit
Käyttöehdot
Tuote Laatu
Noin
Kurdipedia Archivists
Artikkeleita meille!
Lisää Kurdipedia sivustoosi
Lisää / Poista sähköposti
Vierailijat tilastot
Erätilastot
Fonter Kalkulator
Kalenterit Muunnin
Kielet ja murteet sivut
Näppäimistö
Kätevä linkit
Kurdipedia extension for Google Chrome
Cookies
کوردیی ناوەڕاست
کرمانجی - کوردیی سەروو
Kurmancî - Kurdîy Serû
هەورامی
Zazakî
English
Française
Deutsch
عربي
فارسی
Türkçe
Nederlands
Svenska
Español
Italiano
עברית
Pусский
Fins
Norsk
日本人
中国的
Հայերեն
Ελληνική
لەکی
Azərbaycanca
Kirjaudu sisään
Jäsenyys!
Unohtuiko salasana!
        
 kurdipedia.org 2008 - 2024
 Noin
 Satunnainen erä!
 Käyttöehdot
 Kurdipedia Archivists
 Palautetta
 Käyttäjän Kokoelmat
 Tapahtumien aikajärjestys
 Aktiviteetit - Kurdipedia
 Apua
Uusi kohde
Elämäkerta
Sharaf Khan Bidlisi
02-08-2024
شادی ئاکۆیی
Tilastot
Artikkelit
  530,199
Kuvat
  107,414
Kirjat
  19,969
Liittyvät tiedostot
  100,871
Video
  1,470
Kieli
کوردیی ناوەڕاست 
302,852
Kurmancî - Kurdîy Serû 
88,913
هەورامی 
65,837
عربي 
29,220
کرمانجی - کوردیی سەروو 
17,040
فارسی 
8,951
English 
7,403
Türkçe 
3,597
لوڕی 
1,691
Deutsch 
1,480
Pусский 
1,133
Française 
335
Nederlands 
130
Zazakî 
90
Svenska 
63
Հայերեն 
50
Español 
45
Italiano 
44
لەکی 
37
Azərbaycanca 
24
日本人 
20
中国的 
16
Norsk 
14
עברית 
14
Ελληνική 
13
Fins 
12
Polski 
7
Esperanto 
5
Ozbek 
4
Português 
3
Тоҷикӣ 
3
ქართველი 
2
Cebuano 
1
Kiswahili سَوَاحِلي 
1
Hrvatski 
1
Srpski 
1
ترکمانی 
1
Ryhmä
Fins
Kirjasto 
4
Artikkelit 
3
Tilastot ja selvitykset 
1
Elämäkerta 
1
Paikkoja 
1
Kuva ja kuvaus 
1
Kartat 
1
MP3 
323
PDF 
30,450
MP4 
2,394
IMG 
196,443
Kirjasto
Serhildan - Kurdien kansann...
Kirjasto
Layla
Kuva ja kuvaus
Talvimaisema kotiseudultani...
Elämäkerta
Sharaf Khan Bidlisi
No Friends but the Mountains’: The Toxic Legacy of British Officialdom for the Kurds after the First World War
Ryhmä: Artikkelit | Artikkelit kieli: English
Share
Facebook0
Twitter0
Telegram0
LinkedIn0
WhatsApp0
Viber0
SMS0
Facebook Messenger0
E-Mail0
Copy Link0
Sijoitus Kohde
Erinomainen
Erittäin hyvä
Keskimääräinen
Huono
Huono
Lisää kokoelmiin
Kirjoita oma kommenttisi tuote!
Kohdetta historia
Metadata
RSS
Hae Googlella liittyviä kuvia valitun kohteen!
Hae Googlella valitun kohteen!
کوردیی ناوەڕاست0
Kurmancî - Kurdîy Serû0
عربي0
فارسی0
Türkçe0
עברית0
Deutsch0
Español0
Française0
Italiano0
Nederlands0
Svenska0
Ελληνική0
Azərbaycanca0
Cebuano0
Esperanto0
Fins0
Hrvatski0
Kiswahili سَوَاحِلي0
Norsk0
Ozbek0
Polski0
Português0
Pусский0
Srpski0
Тоҷикӣ0
Հայերեն0
ქართველი0
中国的0
日本人0

The report Kurdistan and the Kurds, published in 1919 .India.

The report Kurdistan and the Kurds, published in 1919 .India.
Francis Owtram
The Kurds remain a people without their own independent state, and in their recent abandonment by President Trump have again experienced the particular vulnerabilities of stateless peoples in a world of nation-states. Following the collapse of the Ottoman Empire at the end of the First World War, the lands inhabited by the Kurds were divided between three successor states: Iraq, Syria, and Turkey. The Kurds thus became concentrated minorities within new centralised states which, in practice, almost exclusively followed policies aimed at suppressing Kurdish identity, crude attempts at assimilation, and military repression throughout the twentieth century. Pressured and at times outright attacked by these regimes, the Kurds often only found sanctuary in the rugged peaks and ravines of the Zagros mountain range, providing the basis for the popular Kurdish aphorism: ‘no friends but the mountains.’

This ongoing and contemporary state of affairs arguably has its origins in the prevailing attitudes of British officials towards the Kurds during and immediately after the First World War. Despite the official end of hostilities between Britain and Turkey on 30 October 1918 with the signing of the Armistice of Mudros, for strategic reasons British troops kept marching on until Mosul was occupied on 10 November 1918. Britain consequently occupied the entire Mosul vilayet where there was a high concentration of Kurds. During this initial occupation it seemed that the Kurds were poised to obtain at least an autonomous homeland, as anticipated in the Treaty of Sèvres (10 August 1920).

The British Creation of Iraq

At the San Remo conference in 1920, Britain had been awarded the League of Nations Mandate for Mesopotamia, which subsequently became the Kingdom of Iraq following the signing of the Anglo-Iraqi Treaty on 10 October 1922. The extent of contemporary British awareness of the Kurdish people and their lands is to be found in a report published by the General Staff, India in 1919, which brought together available British knowledge on ‘Kurdistan and the Kurds’.
The report drew on a paper written by Sir Mark Sykes on ‘The Kurdish Tribes of the Ottoman Empire’ in 1908. Sykes’ influence over the formation of the modern Middle East would turn out to be extraordinary and long-lasting, owing to his part in drawing the infamous Sykes-Picot borders on a map of the region, enclosed within the Asia Minor Agreement signed between Britain and France on 16 May 1916. The agreement ushered in the Sykes-Picot era, dividing the Middle East with ‘a line from the “e” in Acre to the last “k” in Kirkuk’, and envisaging a British-controlled state that later became known as Iraq.

The 1919 report also drew on accounts of expeditions by military and political officers in ‘Kurdistan’ whose reports were ‘at present incomplete as the country has only been accessible to British officers for six months’. Accompanying this culmination of extant imperial knowledge was the map ‘Kurdistan and the Kurdish Tribes’, about which the General Staff opined: ‘The map can only be regarded as approximately correct. It is impossible to locate exactly nomad and semi-nomad tribes, or to define boundaries where group overlaps group.’ The report also indicated the extent to which British officials viewed the Kurds with suspicion, perceiving an inherent antipathy towards Britain’s efforts in building new states such as Iraq. Despite these British reservations, Oriental Secretary Gertrude Bell convinced T E Lawrence and Winston Churchill, then Secretary of State for the Colonies, to include the Kurds in the state of Iraq to ensure that its monarch, Faisal I, would rule over a predominantly Sunni – rather than overwhelmingly Shi’a – population. It was this view which would win out – with longstanding consequences for the Kurds – over the perspective of Major Edward Noel, the Political Officer in Sulaimaniyah, who favoured an independent state or autonomy for the Kurds (See ‘Major Noel’s Diary on Special Duty in Diarbekir Vilayat’).
Iraq, Turkey and the Mosul Question

Furthermore, the creation and then development of the state of Iraq by the British – as a means to control the vast reserves of oil considered likely to be found there – also militated against a favourable attitude towards the development of separate areas of autonomy for the Kurds. Similarly, the Turkish resurgence under Atatürk meant that the idea of a homeland or autonomous area for the Kurds did not feature in the Treaty of Lausanne (24 July 1923).

Indeed, the thorny question of the Mosul vilayet and international borders was only resolved in 1926 in the Treaty of Ankara when Turkey agreed for Mosul to be part of Iraq, in payment for revenues from oil for a period of twenty-five years. Turkey simply denied the Kurds in its territory any sense of Kurdish identity, prohibiting the use of the Kurdish language and labelling them ‘Mountain Turks’.
Tragedy, hope and abandonment

Since the end of the First World War, therefore, the story of the Kurds in the Middle East has been marked by state repression, denial of identity, attempted cultural assimilation, and finally attacks with weapons of mass destruction. As first War and Air, then Colonial Secretary, Winston Churchill advocated chemical weapons allied to air power as a potentially useful tool in the frontier regions of India and the Middle East where tribes such as the Kurds were hostile to British imperial control. Churchill’s imperial contemplation in some way was a prelude to the genocidal actions of Iraqi President Saddam Hussein’s actual deployment of chemical weapons to deadly effect against the Kurds at Halabja in 1988. Saddam’s broadly assimilationist approach had before included attempts to militarily pacify Kurdistan in the 1970s, and his antipathy towards the rebellious Kurds continued until the overthrow of his regime by the US military invasion of 2003. Subsequent rulers have dealt with problem of holding Iraq together as a federal state. Moves towards a new form of democracy in Iraq were followed by the creation of the autonomous region of Rojava in Syria, carved out in the midst of the uprising in 2011 against President Bashar al-Assad and the fight against the Islamic State. The Kurds in Syria found themselves surprisingly backed (as with the 1991 Iraqi no-fly zones) by an international coalition led by the US. In Syria, new forms of autonomous democratic development in the Kurdish region seemed to be tantalisingly close to consolidation only to evaporate in a personal transactional deal between Presidents Trump and Erdogan.

‘No friends but the mountains’ … again

Given their history of repression since the First World War it is hardly surprising that the Kurds have been at the forefront of new federal experiments for autonomy in the Middle East, or indeed moves towards independence. Following unresolved constitutional issues with the central government in Baghdad the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) decided to hold, nearly a century after the Sykes-Picot agreement, a referendum on independence in September 2017. This resulted in an emphatic expression of preference for independence (approximately 93 percent), perhaps regardless of the voters’ perceptions of the motivations behind holding the referendum (some Kurdish factions saw it as a ploy by the then KRG President, Masoud Barzani, to distract from domestic failures and questions of good governance). After many years, the Kurds in Iraq were able to participate in a process of self-determination, expressing their thoughts, feelings and aspirations on the possibility of independence and statehood. However, the international community, including the US, UK, UN and the EU, did not support the referendum as it was deemed to be a destabilising and unilaterally conceived measure against the wishes of the sovereign state (Iraq). Nor did the neighbouring states of Turkey and Iran, or indeed the central government in Baghdad, respond favourably to the vote, instead placing the Kurdistan Region under an immediate international air transport blockade followed by military incursions into the ‘Disputed Territories’ in which the divisions of the Kurds in Iraq were cruelly exposed. Kurdish attempts at self-determination continue but with the betrayal of the Kurds in Syria by President Trump and the ongoing repression of the Kurds in Turkey it would seem that the Kurdish refrain that they have ‘no friends but the mountains’ continues to ring true.

Francis Owtram is an Honorary Research Fellow at the University of Exeter and is the author of A Modern History of Oman: Formation of the State since 1920 (IB Tauris, 2004). He is currently researching the modern history, political economy and international relations of Oman for a number of publication projects. He tweets @francisowtram.[1]
Tämä tuote on kirjoitettu (English) kieli, klikkaa kuvaketta avata kohteen alkukielellä!
This item has been written in (English) language, click on icon to open the item in the original language!
Tämä tuote on katsottu 397 kertaa
Kirjoita oma kommenttisi tuote!
HashTag
Lähteet
liittyy kohdetta: 1
Päivämäärät ja tapahtumat
Ryhmä: Artikkelit
Artikkelit kieli: English
Publication date: 15-10-2019 (5 Vuosi)
Kieli - Murre: Englanti
Maa - Alue: Kurdistan
Maa - Alue: United Kingdom
Publication Type: Born-digital
Technical Metadata
Tuote Laatu: 99%
99%
Lisääjä ( هەژار کامەلا ) on 22-04-2023
Tämä artikkeli on tarkistettu ja julkaistu ( زریان سەرچناری ) 24-04-2023
Tämä kohta on hiljattain päivittänyt ( هەژار کامەلا ) on: 22-04-2023
URL
Tämän tuotteen mukaan Kurdipedia n Standardit ei ole viimeistelty vielä!
Tämä tuote on katsottu 397 kertaa
Attached files - Version
Tyyppi Version Toimittajatunnuksesi
Kuvatiedostoa 1.0.168 KB 22-04-2023 هەژار کامەلاهـ.ک.
Kurdipedia on suurin monikielinen lähteistä kurdien tietoja!
Kuva ja kuvaus
Talvimaisema kotiseudultani, Urmiyesta Itä-Kurdistanista vuonna 2011

Actual
Kirjasto
Serhildan - Kurdien kansannousu Vanissa
01-01-2013
هاوڕێ باخەوان
Serhildan - Kurdien kansannousu Vanissa
Kirjasto
Layla
02-03-2015
هاوڕێ باخەوان
Layla
Kuva ja kuvaus
Talvimaisema kotiseudultani, Urmiyesta Itä-Kurdistanista vuonna 2011
02-03-2015
هاوڕێ باخەوان
Talvimaisema kotiseudultani, Urmiyesta Itä-Kurdistanista vuonna 2011
Elämäkerta
Sharaf Khan Bidlisi
02-08-2024
شادی ئاکۆیی
Sharaf Khan Bidlisi
Uusi kohde
Elämäkerta
Sharaf Khan Bidlisi
02-08-2024
شادی ئاکۆیی
Tilastot
Artikkelit
  530,199
Kuvat
  107,414
Kirjat
  19,969
Liittyvät tiedostot
  100,871
Video
  1,470
Kieli
کوردیی ناوەڕاست 
302,852
Kurmancî - Kurdîy Serû 
88,913
هەورامی 
65,837
عربي 
29,220
کرمانجی - کوردیی سەروو 
17,040
فارسی 
8,951
English 
7,403
Türkçe 
3,597
لوڕی 
1,691
Deutsch 
1,480
Pусский 
1,133
Française 
335
Nederlands 
130
Zazakî 
90
Svenska 
63
Հայերեն 
50
Español 
45
Italiano 
44
لەکی 
37
Azərbaycanca 
24
日本人 
20
中国的 
16
Norsk 
14
עברית 
14
Ελληνική 
13
Fins 
12
Polski 
7
Esperanto 
5
Ozbek 
4
Português 
3
Тоҷикӣ 
3
ქართველი 
2
Cebuano 
1
Kiswahili سَوَاحِلي 
1
Hrvatski 
1
Srpski 
1
ترکمانی 
1
Ryhmä
Fins
Kirjasto 
4
Artikkelit 
3
Tilastot ja selvitykset 
1
Elämäkerta 
1
Paikkoja 
1
Kuva ja kuvaus 
1
Kartat 
1
MP3 
323
PDF 
30,450
MP4 
2,394
IMG 
196,443
Kurdipedia on suurin monikielinen lähteistä kurdien tietoja!
Kuva ja kuvaus
Talvimaisema kotiseudultani, Urmiyesta Itä-Kurdistanista vuonna 2011
Folders
Paikkoja - Maa - Alue - Paikkoja - Kaupungit - Erbil Paikkoja - Paikka - Artikkelit - Kirja - Artikkelit - Kieli - Murre - Fins Artikkelit - Asiakirjan Tyyppi - Alkukielellä Elämäkerta - Ihmiset tyyppi - Historioitsija Elämäkerta - Ihmiset tyyppi - Elämäkerta - - Elämäkerta - Kansakunta - Kurdi

Kurdipedia.org (2008 - 2024) version: 15.75
| Yhteystiedot | CSS3 | HTML5

| Sivu sukupolven aika: 0.891 toinen!