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2004 Qamishli riots
Massacre of Kurds by Ba'athist Syrian military
Massacre of Kurds by Ba'athist Syrian military
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| title | 2004 Qamishli riots |
| location | Qamishli city, Syria |
| date | 12 March 2004 |
| fatalities | 30+ |
| injuries | 160+ |
| victims | Kurdistan Region Syrian Kurds |
| perpetrators | |
| notes | 2,000+ arbitrarily arrested; Thousands of Kurds flee to Kurdistan Region |
- Syria Ba'athist Syria
- Flag of the Ba'ath Party.svg Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party
- Flag of the Syrian Arab Armed Forces (1980–2024).svg Syrian Arab Armed Forces
- Flag of the Syrian Arab Army.svg Syrian Arab Army
- Syrian police emblem (Damascus).png Public Security Police
The 2004 Qamishli riots were riots of Syrian Kurds in the northeastern city of Qamishli on 12 March 2004, followed by deadly suppression by the Ba'athist Syrian military forces.
Relations between the Arabs who settled in Qamishli during the Arab Belt programme and Kurdish inhabitants had been tense for decades. In March 2004, clashes broke out between Arab and Kurdish audiences during a chaotic football match. The Ba'ath Party local office was burned down by Kurdish demonstrators, who went on to destroy the statue of Hafez al-Assad in Qamishli city, echoing the toppling of Firdos Square statue in 2003.
The Syrian military swiftly responded; deploying troops backed by tanks and helicopters, and launching an extensive crackdown. At least 30 Kurds were killed and 160 wounded as the security forces re-asserted control over the city. As a result of the crackdown, thousands of Syrian Kurds fled to Iraqi Kurdistan.
Background
Qamishli is the largest town in Al-Hasakah Governorate and is located in northeast Syria. It is regarded as the Kurdish and Assyrian community capital. It is also the center of the Syrian Kurdish struggle, especially in the recent years.
The Kurds also felt opposition from the Syrian government in 1962, forty years before, when the government took census and left out of it many Kurds. This left them and their children without citizenship and the right to obtain government jobs or to have property. This disregarded minority now consists of hundreds of thousands of Kurds, who carry identification cards as "foreigner". Another move the government made which has fueled tensions was resettling Arabs from other parts of the country into along the border in Iran, Iraq and Turkey. They did this in order to build a buffer between Kurdish areas, which has furthered the hatred between the Kurds and Arabs. During the 1970s, thousands of Arabs from the city of Raqqa were settled along a 180-mile strip of Kurdish-majority regions, after confiscating lands from the Kurdish inhabitants in the region, as part of the Ba'athist Arab Belt project. Relations between the Arab settlers and Kurds in the region remained tense for decades.
The United States has for a longer period of time recognized Iraqi Kurdistan diplomatically which has led the Americans to invite the current Kurdish leader of Iraqi Kurdistan, Masoud Barzani, to the White House and a meeting in Baghdad when the American president was in town. The visit from United States Vice President, Joe Biden, to the fourth largest city in Iraq, Erbil, also known as the Iraqi Kurdistan capital, helped strengthen their alliance with them. The United States started Operation Provide Comfort and Operation Provide Comfort II in an attempt to defend Kurds fleeing their homes in Northern Iraq as a result of the Iraqi Gulf War. Kurdish representation in Iraqi government has increased since the American invasion in 2003. Jalal Talabani, the first Kurdish president of Iraq, was elected in 2005, and Kurds have held the presidential seat since, although the position is somewhat ornamental.
Riot and suppression
On 12 March 2004, a football match in Qamishli between a local Kurdish team and an Arab team from Deir ez-Zor in Syria's southeast sparked violent clashes between fans of the opposing sides which spilled into the streets of the city. The fans of the Arab team reportedly rode about town in a bus, insulting the Iraqi Kurdish leaders Masoud Barzani and Jalal Talabani, then leaders of Iraqi Kurdistan's two main parties. In response, Kurdish fans supposedly proclaimed "We will sacrifice our lives for Bush", referring to US President George W. Bush, who invaded Iraq in 2003, deposing Saddam and triggering the Iraq War. Tensions between the groups came to a head, and the Deir ez-Zor Arab fans attacked the Kurdish fans with sticks, stones, and knives. Government security forces brought in to quell the riot, fired into the crowd, killing six people, including three children—all of them were Kurds.
The Ba'ath Party local office was burned down by the demonstrators, leading to the security forces responding and killing more than 15 of the rioters and wounding more than 100. Officials in Qamishli alleged that some Kurdish parties were collaborating with "foreign forces" to supposedly annex some villages in the area to northern Iraq.{{cite news | first = Albert | last = Aji |author2= (Associated Press)
After the violence, President Bashar al-Assad visited the region aiming to achieve a "national unity" and supposedly pardoned 312 Kurds who were prosecuted of participating in the riots.
Aftermath
Moqebleh refugee camp
After the 2004 events in Qamishli, thousands of Kurds fled to the Kurdish Region of Iraq. Local authorities there, the UNHCR and other UN agencies established the Moqebleh camp at a former Army base near Dohuk.
Several years later the KRG moved all refugees, who arrived before 2005, to housing in a second camp, known as Qamishli. The camp consists of a modest housing development with dozens of concrete block houses and a mosque.
As of 2011, the original camp at the former Army citadel contained about 300 people. Many of the homes were made of cement blocks, covered with plastic tarpaulins. Latrines and showers were in separate buildings down the street. Authorities provide electricity, water trucks and food rations. Syrian Kurds can leave the camp to work. As supposed refugees they cannot get government jobs, but are able work in the private sector, often as construction workers or drivers. The Syrian Kurds seem likely not to return to Syria until political conditions change.
2005 demonstrations
In June 2005, thousands of Kurds demonstrated in Qamishli to protest the assassination of Sheikh Khaznawi, a Kurdish cleric in Syria, resulting in the death of one policeman and injury to four Kurds. In March 2008, according to Human Rights Watch, Syrian security forces opened fire at Kurds who were celebrating the spring festival of Nowruz. The shooting killed three people.
2008 vigil in memory of the riots
On 21 March 2008, the Kurdish New Year (Newroz) a school class held a 5 minute vigil in memory of the 2004 Qamishli riots. The participants were investigated for holding the vigil.
2011 protests in Qamishli
With the eruption of the Syrian civil war, the city of Qamishli became one of the protest arenas. On 12 March 2011, thousands of Syrian Kurds in Qamishli and al-Hasakah protested on the day of the Kurdish martyr, an annual event since the 2004 Qamishli riots.
2012 rebellion
Main article: Rojava conflict
Armed rebellions were supported by Mashouq al-Khaznawi. In 2012, armed elements among the Kurds launched Syrian Kurdish rebellion in north and north-western Syria, aiming against Syrian government forces. In the second half of 2012, the rebellion also resulted in clashes between Kurdish soldiers and the militants of the Free Syrian Army, both striving towards control of the region. The AANES would later gain control over most of northern Syria.
References
References
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- James Brandon. (15 February 2007). "The PKK and Syria's Kurds". The Jamestown Foundation.
- Ahmed, Akbar. (2013). "The Thistle and the Drone". Brookings Institution Press.
- James Brandon. (15 February 2007). "The PKK and Syria's Kurds". The Jamestown Foundation.
- Ahmed, Akbar. (2013). "The Thistle and the Drone". Brookings Institution Press.
- [http://www.qantara.de/webcom/show_article.php/_c-476/_nr-800/_p-1/i.html?PHPSESSID=5 Qantara.de - The Kurds of Syria - An Insecure Stone in the Syrian Mosaic]
- Fattah, Hassan M.. (2 July 2005). "Kurds, Emboldened by Lebanon, Rise Up in Tense Syria (Published 2005)". The New York Times.
- Ahmed, Akbar. (2013). "The Thistle and the Drone". Brookings Institution Press.
- Osman, Hiwa. "US Relations With Iraqi Kurdistan". Rudaw.
- Unknown. "Jalal Talabani". Kurish Aspect.
- (8 December 2000). "Iraq Report: December 8, 2000". Radio Free Europe.
- Tejel, p. 115
- (17 September 2011). "Football fans' fight causes a three-day riot in Syria".
- "Turning Points 2014".
- [https://www.hrw.org/english/docs/2004/03/19/syria8132.htm Syria: Address Grievances Underlying Kurdish Unrest], [[HRW]], 19 March 2004.
- {{YouTube. -e64Yd3VBIQ
- Reese Erlich, "Syrian Kurds have long memories," Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting, 21 October 2011. http://pulitzercenter.org/reporting/syria-kurds-moqebleh-refugee-camp-oppose-assad-regime {{Webarchive. link. (4 March 2016)
- Blanford, Nicholas. (15 June 2005). "A murder stirs Kurds in Syria". USA Today.
- Fattah, Hassan M.. (2 July 2005). "Kurds, Emboldened by Lebanon, Rise Up in Tense Syria". The New York Times.
- (24 March 2008). "Syria: Investigate Killing of Kurds".
- (26 November 2009). "Group Denial".
- Youtube. "مظاهرة في الجزيرة السورية 12 اذار 2011".
- Youtube. "حفلة تأبين شهداء إنتفاضة قامشلو".
- soparo.com. "الكورد السوريون يحييون ذكرى انتفاضتهم السابعة بايقاد الشموع اجلالاً و اكراماُ لارواح الشهداء".
- (28 July 2012). "Kurdish Syria: From cultural to armed revolution".
- (4 August 2012). "Hedging their Syrian bets". The Economist.
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