Syrian and Turkish Forces attack Kurds celebrating Newroz holiday
March 25th, 2008After posting some information about the New Year holiday, some of you replied with some comments regarding the response of Syrian and Turkish forces to the celebrations in the Kurdish regions within each country. In the largest Kurdish city, Diyarbakir (or Amed, in Kurdish), reports say that over 1 million people gathered to listen to the music, dance, and hear speeches from the local Kurdish politicians. Pictures from the event showed Turkish jets and helicopters flying low but there were no encounters with this extremely large crowd of celebrators.
However, while the festival in the Diyarbakir remained peaceful with no Turkish forces to intervene (perhaps because of the size of the festival there), other areas of celebration did not. In particular, across the border in Syria in the Kurdish city of Qamishli, three Kurds were shot dead by Syrian “security” forces. The reports say that the Syrian forces opened gunfire into the crowd after celebrators lit torches as part of the festivities. As I mentioned in the previous post, fire (and torches) is a big part of the Newroz celebrations all over the world, and it seems rather that the Syrian forces were simply more interested in looking for an excuse to open gunfire on the crowd in order to disperse them than they were concerned for a few torches.
Kurdish celebrators were also met with violence elsewhere. In several Kurdish cities throughout Turkey, Newroz celebrations were simply forbidden just as they have been in the past. The people in the Kurdish cities of Van, Hakkari, Urfa, and Siirt were denied permits to carry out their festivities.
Nevertheless, you cannot stop the people from celebrating an ancient holiday. Music was played loud and clear, and the celebrators set up fires to jump over; jumping over fire is an old tradition practiced all over the world by the various groups that celebrate Newroz. Unfortunately, in these cities, Turkish forces responded to peaceful celebrators with violence using batons, tear gas and water cannons. Many were injured and hundreds are said to have been arrested.
The following video was captured by the Turkish daily newspaper, Hürriyet, and speaks for itself. Local sources (verified by more video footage) say the festival started peaceful until Turkish police rushed the celebrators at times even beating the women with their batons as can be seen.
Update: Two more deaths in Turkey after victims suffered severe injuries reported the Agence France-Presse. People again poured into the streets to protest and more clashes with Turkish police left several more protesters injured.















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The footage makes me want to teach those people the value of a few well placed snipers on rooftops. Injustice makes me angry.
it’s shameful
when ME people learn to how respect other languages , cultures ,religions … when?
when I can see Democracy,Human Rights in ME -This ancient land- ?
someone believe that War in ME is because of the west,… but I’m as an ME’s young man believe that this war comes from overselves. This war comes from how we see each other.
How Turks in turkey ignore a Kurdish minority in their country and deny it?
and also in Iran,Syria?
How some Israelian people ignore Palestinian and their rights?
How some Muslim deny and ignore some facts about Israel?
I’m believe that ME problems come from a very deep paradoxes and misunderstood in our society
maybe next generation…hope to be.
[...] blogger Goran reports on Syrian and Turkish attacks on Kurds celebrating Newroz, a traditional festivity which [...]
[...] in the week, I had reported about the Turkish forces’ brutality against Kurds who were trying to celebrate [...]