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The Kurds are being driven out again -
this time by Iran
By Ned Parker in the Kandil mountains,
northern Iraq
Timesonline.co.uk
August 26, 2006

A SECRET war is being waged in Iraqi Kurdistan’s isolated Kandil mountain
range. Since April Iran has been bombing the area in an attempt to expel
Kurdish separatists, who have turned the rugged terrain into their own
mini-state.
An estimated 400 families have fled the mountains to escape the Iranian
attacks. No let-up appears in sight as fighters from the Kurdistan
Workers’ Party (PKK) refuse to abandon their enclave.
Murat Karayilan, the PKK’s bristly, grey-haired number two commander
believes the campaign is an attempt by the Islamic republic to curry
favour with Turkey, the PKK’s sworn enemy.
“The Turkish and Iranian forces have made an alliance to attack us,” Mr
Karayilan told The Times inside his group’s enclave. “Iran is attacking us
to make friends with Turkey and to send a message to the United States.”
In turn, Mr Karayilan claims the PKK’s sister group, the Kurdistan Free
Life Party (PJK), a grouping of Iranian Kurdish separatists, has carried
out reprisals in Iran. Since May the PJK has killed 94 Iranian soldiers,
the PKK claims.
“You may ask why does Iran attack us. It is because of the larger issues
of the Middle East,” said Mr Karayilan.
This week the Royal Institute of Strategic Affairs, a UK think-tank, gave
warning that Iran had become the most influential country in the Middle
East, three years after the US-led invasion of Iraq.
The Iranian campaign in Kandil has coincided with renewed Turkish
artillery strikes against PKK camps along the Iraq-Turkey border. The
attacks are seen as a way to pressure Iraqi Kurdistan and are also
revealing of Turkey and Iran’s skittish nature when it comes to their own
restive Kurdish populations.
Mr Karayilan believes that Turkey is using the PKK as a pretext to
intimidate Iraq’s Kurdish regional government about the future of the
oil-rich Iraqi city of Kirkuk, which the Kurds want to annex despite
Turkey’s adamant opposition. Kirkuk boasts large Arab and Turkmen
populations.
The PKK fought Turkish security forces for much of the 1980s and 1990s.
Their guerilla war in Turkey cost more than 30,000 lives, but the PKK
declared a ceasefire in 1999 after the capture of Abdullah Ocalan, its
leader.
They returned to armed struggle in 2004 in anger over Ankara’s failure to
engage them.
Flanked by his Kalashnikov-toting women and men, Mr Karayilan is confident
no one will be able to force his men out of the Kandil mountain range on
the triangle border of Iran, Iraq and Turkey.
Mr Karayilan and his troops, clad in their olive soldier uniforms, cruise
the serpentine mountain roads in Nissan Patrols. PKK soldiers man
checkpoints and sentry posts from hilltop to hilltop. Their green flags
adorn mountainsides. At the entrance to their enclave, concrete blocks
mark the road and a giant poster of Ocalan stares down from a slope.
Iraq’s Kurdish regional government professes helplessness about the
situation with the PKK and Iran.
“Kandil is a very difficult terrain. Because of the geographical terrain
in Kandil, no one in the Kurdish Government, the Iraqi government . . .
has been able to control this place,” said Othman Haji Mahmoud, interior
minister for Sulaimaniyah.
“We hope the PKK leaves Kandil. We remind the Iranian Government to stop
its shelling.”
Meanwhile, the refugee population continues to grow. Along stream beds
south of the Kandil mountains, villagers have staked up tents.
On August 18 Rasul Hama Ahmed fled his village of Karosh when Iranian
shells rained down from the sky. Everyone ran to hide in caves, ditches
and behind trees. One shepherd was killed in their village three hours by
foot from the Iranian border. Twenty-five homes were destroyed. “The
shells fell like stones from the sky,” he said and hoisted up his leg to
show a knick from shrapnel.
It was the second time his village had been struck since April and Ahmed
said he was not taking any more chances. He estimated that 4,000 people
had been uprooted since the start of the Iranian offensive.
Ahmed complained the women and children were getting sick from the
stream’s water. He said the village had still not decided whether to
return home.
Looking at his ramshackle makeshift camp of four tents, Ahmed added: “I
want freedom, not to be a prisoner of bombing and fighting.”
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