Ethnic conflict: The forgotten Kurds
Under the banner of Arab nationalism and other unitary ideologies, ethnicbased claims to political and other rights in the Middle East have been suppressed. As a result, as the Kurdish question illustrates, ethnic conflict is a very real issue in the post-world wars era. The arbitrary nature of state creation following the collapse of the Ottoman Empire and the emergence of regimes striving to consolidate and maintain their authority within highly artificial borders has forced issues of ethnic identity underground without eradicating them. It has been the response by states to the pressures imposed by a growing ethnic and national consciousness amongst the Kurdish people that has brought about episodes of sustained conflict within three countries in the region.
The Kurds, who number at least 26 million, are, after the Arabs, the largest ethnic group in the near and Middle East. About 90 per cent of the total Kurdish population world-wide live within the boundaries of one Arab country (Iraq) and two non-Arab states (Turkey and Iran). The remainder are found in Syria (about one million), the former Soviet Union (half a million) with 700,000 living in a wider diaspora. Despite their numbers the Kurds have consistently been denied the right to statehood and have been a persecuted minority in the region. Kurdish demands for self-determination have for nearly a century led to conflict, particularly in Iraq, Iran and Turkey. The conflict has been both horizontal and vertical in dimension; within the Kurdish communities and between the Kurds and the state. Additionally individual states have exploited Kurdish ambitions in order to promote tension or conflict with their neighbours. With increasingly little hope of establishing statehood or achieving secession from any of the states within the region they have encountered armed repression in response to their attempts to obtain formal recognition of their claims for political and civil rights. The states’ response to such demands, particularly in Turkey and Iraq, has resulted in policies of enforced population transfer at one end of the scale of state-organized oppression to ethnic cleansing and wholesale massacre at the other. In this chapter we will examine why this is so and look at the prospects for the Kurds in the opening decades of the third millennium... |