Biblioteca Biblioteca
Ricerca

Kurdipedia è la più grande fonte di informazioni Curdo!


Search Options





Ricerca Avanzata      Keyboard


Ricerca
Ricerca Avanzata
Biblioteca
nomi curdi
Cronologia degli eventi
Fonti
Storia
collezioni degli utenti
Attività
Cerca Aiuto?
pubblicazione
Video
Classifiche
Voce a caso !
Invia
Invia l'articolo
Invia immagine
Survey
tuo feedback
Contatto
Che tipo di informazioni abbiamo bisogno !
Standards
Condizioni di utilizzo
Qualità Voce
Strumenti
A proposito
Kurdipedia Archivists
Articoli su di noi !
Kurdipedia Aggiungi al tuo sito web
Aggiungi / Elimina e-mail
Statistiche di accesso
Statistiche voce
Convertitore di font
Calendari Converter
Lingue e dialetti delle pagine
Keyboard
Link a portata di mano
Kurdipedia extension for Google Chrome
Cookies
Lingue
کوردیی ناوەڕاست
کرمانجی - کوردیی سەروو
Kurmancî - Kurdîy Serû
هەورامی
Zazakî
English
Française
Deutsch
عربي
فارسی
Türkçe
Nederlands
Svenska
Español
Italiano
עברית
Pусский
Norsk
日本人
中国的
Հայերեն
Ελληνική
لەکی
Azərbaycanca
Il mio conto
Entra
appartenenza !
dimenticato la password !
Ricerca Invia Strumenti Lingue Il mio conto
Ricerca Avanzata
Biblioteca
nomi curdi
Cronologia degli eventi
Fonti
Storia
collezioni degli utenti
Attività
Cerca Aiuto?
pubblicazione
Video
Classifiche
Voce a caso !
Invia l'articolo
Invia immagine
Survey
tuo feedback
Contatto
Che tipo di informazioni abbiamo bisogno !
Standards
Condizioni di utilizzo
Qualità Voce
A proposito
Kurdipedia Archivists
Articoli su di noi !
Kurdipedia Aggiungi al tuo sito web
Aggiungi / Elimina e-mail
Statistiche di accesso
Statistiche voce
Convertitore di font
Calendari Converter
Lingue e dialetti delle pagine
Keyboard
Link a portata di mano
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
Norsk
日本人
中国的
Հայերեն
Ελληνική
لەکی
Azərbaycanca
Entra
appartenenza !
dimenticato la password !
        
 kurdipedia.org 2008 - 2024
 A proposito
 Voce a caso !
 Condizioni di utilizzo
 Kurdipedia Archivists
 tuo feedback
 collezioni degli utenti
 Cronologia degli eventi
 Attività - Kurdipedia
 Aiuto
Nuovo elemento
Biblioteca
Essere Curdo ; Il più grande popolo senza Stato, tradito dalla storia
17-02-2020
زریان سەرچناری
Biblioteca
IL DIRITTO DI ESISTERE: Storie di kurdi e turchi insieme per la libertà
07-02-2019
زریان سەرچناری
Biblioteca
Canti d’amore e di libertà del popolo kurdo
07-02-2019
زریان سەرچناری
Biblioteca
Kurdistan: un genocidio postmoderno
27-08-2014
هاوڕێ باخەوان
Biblioteca
I Curdi nella storia
27-08-2014
هاوڕێ باخەوان
Biblioteca
Guerra e Pace in Kurdistan
11-08-2014
هاوڕێ باخەوان
Biblioteca
GRAMMATICA E VOCABULARIO DELLA LINGUA KURDA
16-10-2011
هاوڕێ باخەوان
Statistiche
Articoli 519,083
Immagini 106,530
Libri 19,256
File correlati 96,988
Video 1,384
Biblioteca
Kurdistan. Cucina e Tradizi...
Biblioteca
I curdi / Viaggio in un pae...
Biblioteca
Kurdistan: un genocidio pos...
Biblioteca
Memorandum sulla situazione...
Biblioteca
Un destino in versi, lirici...
Intensifying Turkish war against Kurds marks Treaty of Sevres centenary
Gruppo: Articoli | linguaggio articoli: English
Share
Facebook0
Twitter0
Telegram0
LinkedIn0
WhatsApp0
Viber0
SMS0
Facebook Messenger0
E-Mail0
Copy Link0
voce Classifica
Eccellente
Molto buono
media
Povero
Bad
Aggiungi alle mie collezioni
Scrivi il tuo commento su questo articolo!
elementi della cronologia
Metadata
RSS
ricerca in Google per le immagini relative alla voce selezionata !
ricerca in Google per la voce selezionata !
کوردیی ناوەڕاست0
Kurmancî - Kurdîy Serû0
عربي0
فارسی0
Türkçe0
עברית0
Deutsch0
Español0
Française0
Italiano0
Nederlands0
Svenska0
Ελληνική0
Azərbaycanca0
Fins0
Norsk0
Pусский0
Հայերեն0
中国的0
日本人0

The Treaty of Sevres

The Treaty of Sevres
David Romano
The treaty, signed on 10-08-1920, promised Turkey’s religious and ethnic minorities safeguards to protect their rights
As in Syria, Turkish military strikes in Iraqi Kurdistan against PKK use the well-worn rhetoric about necessary “buffer zones”
MISSOURI: As Turkey carries out almost daily attacks on impoverished Kurdish regions in neighboring Syria and Iraq, keeps its own elected ethnic Kurdish MPs indefinitely imprisoned, and coerces Iraqi Arab and Kurdish authorities to act as its local police, it is hard to remember that August marks the centenary of a pact in which provision was made for a Kurdish state.
The Treaty of Sevres, signed on Aug. 10, 1920, essentially laid out the Ottoman Empire’s terms of surrender following the First World War. The treaty, which included signatories from Britain, France, Italy and the Ottoman Empire, promised religious and ethnic minorities in Turkey various safeguards to protect them and their rights.
With regard to the Kurds, the treaty stated: “If within one year from the coming into force of the present Treaty the Kurdish peoples within the areas defined in Article 62 shall address themselves to the Council of the League of Nations in such a manner as to show that a majority of the population of these areas desires independence from Turkey, and if the Council then considers that these peoples are capable of such independence and recommends that it should be granted to them, Turkey hereby agrees to execute such a recommendation, and to renounce all rights and title over these areas.” (Kurdistan Section III Article 64)
Under the leadership of Mustafa Kemal (who later came to be known as Ataturk), remnants of the Ottoman army organized military resistance to the terms of the treaty. Convinced that they were fighting to save the sultanate and caliphate, and promised recognition and self-governance in the new Turkey, most Kurdish tribes joined with Ataturk during what came to be known as Turkey’s War of Independence.
The Ataturk-led resistance to Sevres proved successful, and the treaty was replaced in 1923 by the Treaty of Lausanne. Ataturk’s representatives in Lausanne insisted on stipulations regarding minority rights in the new treaty, however, wherein Turkey only recognized “non-Muslims” as minorities, specifically the Jewish, Greek and Armenian communities. Turkish representatives in Lausanne rejected the concept of ethnic minorities in Turkey, thereby also refusing to entertain cultural, linguistic or other minority rights for such groups.
With the loss of its holdings in Europe and Arab lands, as well as genocidal campaigns against Christians in Ottoman lands, the Kurds stood out as Turkey’s only remaining significant minority in 1923.
The refusal of Turkish diplomats to recognize ethnic minority rights in Lausanne was thus squarely aimed at the Kurds. Their policy formed the first step in betraying earlier promises of recognition and self-governance to the Kurds who participated in Turkey’s War of Independence.
Under a Muslim sultanate and caliphate, Kurds (the large majority of whom are Sunni Muslim) could have expected an equal place. It thus made sense for Kurds to join Turks in fighting for these two institutions in 1920. But Ataturk abolished the sultanate in 1923 and the caliphate in 1924, replacing them with a secular nation-state concept imported from parts of Europe.
Taking his cue from France in particular, Ataturk then went about trying to make the Turkish state and nation completely co-terminous, meaning that only a Turkish ethnic national identity would be permitted in the new Turkey. Kurdish language, culture, music, names and any other manifestations of Kurdish identity were promptly outlawed.
Demonstrators clash with Turkish riot police during a March for Democracy called by Kurdish People's Democratic Party (HDP) in Istanbul on June 15, 2020. (Photo by BULENT KILIC / AFP)
The Kurds unsurprisingly revolted against the secularization and Turkification of the new state in 1925 and 1927-30. These revolts and numerous subsequent ones were all brutally suppressed.
The 1937-38 suppression of the Kurdish revolt in Dersim (renamed Tunceli by Turkish authorities) is recognized by many as a genocide, with 10,000-30,000 killed, including civilians hiding in caves who were murdered with poison gas or burned alive by Turkish forces.
When Kurdish unrest began manifesting itself in Turkey again in the 1960s, one right-wing Turkish nationalist periodical warned the Kurds to “remember the Armenians” — a somewhat ironic choice of rhetoric given Turkish nationalists’ refusal to admit that the Ottomans ever committed genocide against the Armenians of Anatolia, whose numbers fell from some 2 million in the Ottoman Empire on the eve of the First World War to almost nothing after 1915.
With the exception of Turkey’s 1974 intervention in Cyprus, the Turkish armed forces seemed to specialize in only one thing since the creation of the Turkish Republic: Suppressing Kurds. Apart from Cyprus and participation in the Korean War and the 1991 Desert Storm campaign in Iraq, the Turkish military’s only significant operations in the 20th century involved counterinsurgency against Kurds.
Most of the military campaigns took place in Turkey itself, but from the 1980s onward the Turkish military also frequently conducted cross-border raids into Iraq to chase after guerrillas of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK). And so it continues to this day.
Turkey’s invasion and occupation of Afrin in northern Syria in 2018 was aimed at PKK-aligned Syrian-Kurdish groups there. The October 2019 Turkish invasion and occupation of parts of northern Syria east of Afrin had the same objective.
Although no significant attacks from Kurdish forces in Syria into Turkey had occurred since the onset of the Syrian civil war in 2011, Turkey claimed a need to occupy and establish “buffer zones” in northern Syria. The Turkish invasions seriously threatened Kurdish-led operations against Daesh in Syria.
Although one might not know it from the scant media coverage, almost weekly Turkish strikes in Iraqi Kurdistan, with remarkably similar rhetoric about necessary “buffer zones,” have been ongoing for several years. The most recent series of operations (dubbed Claw-Eagle and Claw-Tiger) this year have seen Turkish ground troops deployed to the area, in addition to Turkish bases already present in Iraqi Kurdistan since the mid-1990s.
The Treaty of Sevres was signed on Aug. 10, 1920. (Supplied)
The maneuvers in the summer of 2020 also seemed to be conducted in cooperation with Iranian forces, with Turkish airstrikes against fighters of the Free Life Party of Iranian Kurdistan (PJAK), an Iranian-Kurdish party aligned with the PKK.
Recently, a Turkish drone strike killed two high-ranking officers of the Iraqi army who were meeting with PKK militants in northern Iraq after clashes between the two. Both Baghdad and Erbil, the seat of the Kurdistan Autonomous Region of Iraq, have repeatedly protested against Turkey’s violations of Iraqi sovereignty, but to little effect.
Turkey claims a right to defend itself and act against the PKK presence in Iraq or PKK-aligned Kurdish groups in Syria. If the mere presence of such groups, especially in the very mountainous and difficult-to-control territory along the border, justifies invasions and occupations of Arab territories, a similar logic could in theory be used by Israel or the US to target Palestinian Hamas leaders hosted in Ankara and Istanbul today, to say nothing of Arab countries whose Islamist critics have extensive propaganda campaigns operating from Turkish soil.
The official Turkish approach of the last 100 years seems rather like a policy of opposing Kurdish self-government “even if it’s in Alaska,” as a popular Turkish joke goes. When Turkey invaded northern Syria in 2018 and 2019, one justification offered by Turkish leaders was that they did not want “to see Syria become another northern Iraq.” By this, they meant Kurdish autonomy in Iraq, of course.
One-hundred years after the Treaty of Sevres, it looks like “le plus ça change, le plus c’est pareil.”
• David Romano is Thomas G. Strong Professor of Middle East Politics at Missouri State University.[1]
Questo articolo è stato scritto in (English) lingua, fare clic sull'icona per aprire l'articolo in lingua originale!
This item has been written in (English) language, click on icon to open the item in the original language!
Questo oggetto è stato visto volte 1,077
HashTag
Fonti
[1] | English | arabnews.com 23-08-2020
Articoli collegati: 6
Gruppo: Articoli
linguaggio articoli: English
Publication date: 23-08-2020 (4 Anno)
Dialetto: Inglese
Libro: Politic
Provincia: Kurdistan
Provincia: Turchia
Publication Type: Born-digital
Technical Metadata
Qualità Voce: 99%
99%
Aggiunto da ( هەژار کامەلا ) su 20-04-2023
Questo articolo è stato esaminato e rilasciato da ( زریان سەرچناری ) su 24-04-2023
Questa voce recentemente aggiornato da ( هەژار کامەلا ) in: 24-04-2023
URL
Questa voce secondo Kurdipedia di Standards è non ancora esauriti !
Questo oggetto è stato visto volte 1,077
Attached files - Version
Tipo Version Nome Editor
file di foto 1.0.170 KB 20-04-2023 هەژار کامەلاهـ.ک.
Kurdipedia è la più grande fonte di informazioni Curdo!
Biblioteca
Memorandum sulla situazione dei Kurdi
Biblioteca
Kurdistan: un genocidio postmoderno
Biblioteca
Kurdistan iraqeno: un caso di passaggio alla democrazia?
Biblioteca
La questione curda
Articoli
Storia dei curdi
Biblioteca
IL DIRITTO DI ESISTERE: Storie di kurdi e turchi insieme per la libertà

Actual
Biblioteca
Kurdistan. Cucina e Tradizioni Del Popolo Curdo
21-11-2013
بەناز جۆڵا
Kurdistan. Cucina e Tradizioni Del Popolo Curdo
Biblioteca
I curdi / Viaggio in un paese che non c\'è
17-09-2013
هاوڕێ باخەوان
I curdi / Viaggio in un paese che non c\'è
Biblioteca
Kurdistan: un genocidio postmoderno
27-08-2014
هاوڕێ باخەوان
Kurdistan: un genocidio postmoderno
Biblioteca
Memorandum sulla situazione dei Kurdi
27-08-2014
هاوڕێ باخەوان
Memorandum sulla situazione dei Kurdi
Biblioteca
Un destino in versi, lirici curdi
28-08-2014
هاوڕێ باخەوان
Un destino in versi, lirici curdi
Nuovo elemento
Biblioteca
Essere Curdo ; Il più grande popolo senza Stato, tradito dalla storia
17-02-2020
زریان سەرچناری
Biblioteca
IL DIRITTO DI ESISTERE: Storie di kurdi e turchi insieme per la libertà
07-02-2019
زریان سەرچناری
Biblioteca
Canti d’amore e di libertà del popolo kurdo
07-02-2019
زریان سەرچناری
Biblioteca
Kurdistan: un genocidio postmoderno
27-08-2014
هاوڕێ باخەوان
Biblioteca
I Curdi nella storia
27-08-2014
هاوڕێ باخەوان
Biblioteca
Guerra e Pace in Kurdistan
11-08-2014
هاوڕێ باخەوان
Biblioteca
GRAMMATICA E VOCABULARIO DELLA LINGUA KURDA
16-10-2011
هاوڕێ باخەوان
Statistiche
Articoli 519,083
Immagini 106,530
Libri 19,256
File correlati 96,988
Video 1,384
Kurdipedia è la più grande fonte di informazioni Curdo!
Biblioteca
Memorandum sulla situazione dei Kurdi
Biblioteca
Kurdistan: un genocidio postmoderno
Biblioteca
Kurdistan iraqeno: un caso di passaggio alla democrazia?
Biblioteca
La questione curda
Articoli
Storia dei curdi
Biblioteca
IL DIRITTO DI ESISTERE: Storie di kurdi e turchi insieme per la libertà

Kurdipedia.org (2008 - 2024) version: 15.5
| Contatto | CSS3 | HTML5

| Pagina tempo di generazione: 1.797 secondo (s)!