Saturday, 18 June 2011
Iranian army shoot Kurdish sheeps
Kristiina Koivunen
Iran has bombed Iraqi Kurdistan every spring since 1991, also since the creation of Kurdistan autonomous area. Shelling starts when farmers and Rawand people arrive to the mountains for agricultural work. The Rawand people are half nomads who spend winters in the plain lands and summers in the mountains.
Now the shelling has started again. I copy here part of Arina Moradi's article from Peayanmar Newsagency, published Saturday the 18th June 2011:
On Friday night Iranian Revolutionary Guards were attacking Kurdistan shepherds on borders for two hours, shooting on numbers of sheep.
Yesterday night, Kurdistan sheep owners in border areas became the target of Iranian forces’ attacks for two hours, shooting on their sheep and caused no human casualties, but huge property looses.
“In this week, Iranian Revolutionary Guards had attacked villages on Kurdistan- Iran borders twice, caused huge property casualties for Kurdistan shepherds and sheep owners in border areas” Muhaidin Ahmad, one of these Kurdish shepherds told Peyamner News Agency.
... Those shepherds who have been attacked last night, have kept the distance from borders line, yet became the target of Iranian Revolutionary Guards.
... Kurdistan border areas with Iran shapes the major land for agriculture and grasslands for the region, however because of Iran’s frequent attacks remained useless even for life.
Last year I visited in mid June Wezê village (near Choman) where Iranian army had killed thirteen years old Basoz Jahbar Agha. I wrote about the situation in Wezê in Aso newspaper and in Sahmaran blog the 20th June 2010:
On Sunday the 12th June 2010 I travelled to Wezê village near Choman to get information about the shelling of this year.
In this village thirteen years old Basoz Jahbar Agha was killed by Iranian rocket the 30th May. I met her grand mother Aisha Abdullah.
“At that day a group of teenager girls planted tomatoes on a mountain field. She had made a fire to prepare tea at 9.30 AM”, told Aisha Abdullah.
I met in Choman Kaymakan Abdul Wahid Gowani. He told that he meets often representatives of the Iranian state. Iranians say always that they shell PJAK guerrillas and enemies of Iran.
"How ever, they have killed only Kurdish civilians”, said Abdul Wahid Gowani.
“When we meet Iranians we say to them that this is high technology war fare. They have equipment to see everything on our side, so they are surely aware that PJAK is not here”, he said.
“Iranians shell only agriculture areas, not forests”, said the villagers. Their target is unarmed civilians, PJAK fighters do not wait Iranian army in day light in tomato fields.
“Here are no armed men. We have not seen in years armed guerrillas”, said the villagers.
”The target of Iran is not PJAK but destabilization of Kurdish region”, explained Abdul Wahid Gowani.
“Iran wants Kurds to be refuges in big cities. Shelling makes people afraid to come here, so they stop practising agriculture here,” said Abdul Wahid Gowani. He gave statics of the shelling during spring 2010: one girl died, one woman was injured, 25 sheep died and 237 families left their homes or did not return to mountains from the plain lands as they have done earlier.
The villagers in Wezê told that many men are afraid to come there, it is mainly women and children who remain in these mountain villages.
“The amount of shepherds decreases every year”, told Abdul Wahid Gowani. About one hundred Rawand families leave the job every year because they are afraid to go to the mountains despite they like them very much.
“ Iran wants to destroy by shelling the culture of the Rawand people”, claimed Abdul Wahid Gowani and continued: “The Rawand culture is not only Kurdish heritage, it is international heritage. Their culture and way of living is ancient, only few people are able to live like this.”
Kurdistan has been for decades target for various types of genocides. Saddam destroyed in Iraqi Kurdistan almost all villages. Iran is now destroying those villages which survived the Ba'ath government period. The destruction of traditional Kurdish way of living by Iranian bombings is one method of cultural and economical genocide. The target is to destroy the Rawand culture which is original Kurdish way of living. And Iran wants to empty villages near its boarder and to create so called security zone as decided in Algiers Accord 1975.
Because of the Iranian shellings the ancient Rawand culture is in danger to disappear completely. We may not let this happen. For the survival of their culture there is need to make research about the effects of the shellings. Also the Rawand way of living must be surveyed. Rawand people need support which benefits their survival as a group. I think the best way is to let them to practise their original livelihood and provide market for their products.
But the first thing is that Iran must stop immediately the shelling the Rawand people and other civilians.
Unfortunately the situation seems to be still same as it was one year ago. The world is silent, the Kurds are silent, and the friends of Kurds are silent when the ancient Rawand culture disappeares little by little.
Photo: Kristiina Koivunen
Tuesday, 5 April 2011
Qandil flowers
Kristiina Koivunen
Name Qandil is often understood as synonym to PKK camps in South Kurdistan. That is just the military aspect and very narrow perspective on Qandil. It is huge mountain area in the heart of Kurdistan and home for many semi-nomadic Rawand tribes.
Let's hope that in the future Qandil will be a national park!
There must be research of the flora and fauna of Qandil. Many species are unique and exist only in Kurdistan. Some of them have already vanished completely.
Just look at these pictures from Qandi, near Choman, from May 2010! I am not a biology expert, maybe these are very common flowers. For me the thing what matters is that they are beautiful.
Photos: Kristiina Koivunen
Saturday, 5 February 2011
Snow in Sulaymania
Kristiina Koivunen
Winter came late this year to Kurdistan, but finally we have here real winter and lots of snow on the mountains around Sulaymania. Just have look at these photos which I took at the beginning of February 2011!
Photos: Kristiina Koivunen
Sunday, 23 January 2011
Kurdistan of Northern Iraq: Eco-tourism wonderland?
Peyamner News Agency 22 January 2011
The tale of three American hikers held for over a year in Iran after apparently straying into the country from northern Iraq may have led some to wonder at the wisdom of choosing Iraq as a holiday destination.
But, despite the continuing violence in many parts of the country, there are those who are hoping to persuade people to do exactly that, as the BBC's Gabriel Gatehouse has been finding out.
Azzam told us to stop paddling and just let go.
"Just enjoy it. You're on river time now," he said, as we drifted gently downstream.
There were four of us in the inflatable dinghy. The river itself, the Zab, was a brilliant shade of turquoise-green. On either side, the mountains were yellow, covered in green scrub. And overhead, colourful birds - bee-eaters and hoopoes - swooped and played over the water.
Of all the places I have ever been to in Iraq, this is by far the most beautiful, and the most peaceful.
This is not the Iraq we know from our televisions screens. Not the Iraq of "Shock and Awe", nor the Iraq of the near-daily suicide bombings. This is Kurdistan.
Wedged in between the borders of Iran and Turkey, Iraqi Kurdistan runs its own affairs in the north-east of the country. It is mountainous rather than flat, green rather than arid. And most importantly, it is relatively safe.
Azzam Alwash is an Iraqi-American environmentalist. A few years ago he was instrumental in reviving Iraq's southern marshlands.
Now he has turned his attention to Kurdistan, and he's hoping to turn this part of northern Iraq into a haven for eco-tourists.
One of the attractions he hopes will pull in the punters is white-water rafting.
As we approached the rapids, suddenly we were no longer relaxing on "river time". It was all hands on the oars and mind the rocks as we plunged over.
It was my first time rafting, and it was exhilarating: one minute of pure terror, followed by a wonderful sense of elation as the dinghy resumed its previous gentle pace.
The tale of three American hikers held for over a year in Iran after apparently straying into the country from northern Iraq may have led some to wonder at the wisdom of choosing Iraq as a holiday destination.
But, despite the continuing violence in many parts of the country, there are those who are hoping to persuade people to do exactly that, as the BBC's Gabriel Gatehouse has been finding out.
Azzam told us to stop paddling and just let go.
"Just enjoy it. You're on river time now," he said, as we drifted gently downstream.
There were four of us in the inflatable dinghy. The river itself, the Zab, was a brilliant shade of turquoise-green. On either side, the mountains were yellow, covered in green scrub. And overhead, colourful birds - bee-eaters and hoopoes - swooped and played over the water.
Of all the places I have ever been to in Iraq, this is by far the most beautiful, and the most peaceful.
This is not the Iraq we know from our televisions screens. Not the Iraq of "Shock and Awe", nor the Iraq of the near-daily suicide bombings. This is Kurdistan.
Wedged in between the borders of Iran and Turkey, Iraqi Kurdistan runs its own affairs in the north-east of the country. It is mountainous rather than flat, green rather than arid. And most importantly, it is relatively safe.
Azzam Alwash is an Iraqi-American environmentalist. A few years ago he was instrumental in reviving Iraq's southern marshlands.
Now he has turned his attention to Kurdistan, and he's hoping to turn this part of northern Iraq into a haven for eco-tourists.
One of the attractions he hopes will pull in the punters is white-water rafting.
As we approached the rapids, suddenly we were no longer relaxing on "river time". It was all hands on the oars and mind the rocks as we plunged over.
It was my first time rafting, and it was exhilarating: one minute of pure terror, followed by a wonderful sense of elation as the dinghy resumed its previous gentle pace.
Friday, 21 January 2011
Qara Dagh
Kristiina Koivunen
Qara Dagh is mountain area south from Sulaymania, in South Kurdistan. It is a popular picnic resort during springs. I took these pictures in spring 2010.
Photos: Kristiina Koivunen
Qara Dagh is mountain area south from Sulaymania, in South Kurdistan. It is a popular picnic resort during springs. I took these pictures in spring 2010.
Photos: Kristiina Koivunen
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