Turkmens: Victims of Arabization and Kurdification Policies in Kirkuk
Turkmens: Victims of Arabization and Kurdification Policies in Kirkuk
Author(s): Şafak OğuzSubject(s): Geography, Regional studies, Recent History (1900 till today), Cultural Anthropology / Ethnology, Studies in violence and power, Demography and human biology, Identity of Collectives
Published by: Gazi Akademik Bakış
Keywords: Kirkuk; Turkmen; Arabization; Kurdification; Change of Demography;
Summary/Abstract: Kirkuk, with its large oil reserves, has constituted one of the most significant points of controversy politically, ethnically, and economically in modern Iraq. Historically a Turkmen city, Kirkuk underwent a massive Arabization policy during the Baathist regime in order to modify the city’s demographics. This formed the major means by which the Baathist regime sought to control this multiethnic and multireligious city. After the US invasion of Iraq in 2003, Kurds launched a massive Kurdification program whereby Turkmen and Arabs have been encouraged to leave the city. The demography of the city has been changing in favor of the Kurds, who have resorted to all means, not excluding crimes against humanity, to form the majority of the city’s population before the referendum that will decide not only the status of the city but also the future of Iraq and the Middle East. In supporting the Kurds, Western countries have ignored the suffering of the Turkmen, the primary victims of Arabization in the past and nowadays of Kurdification.
Journal: Gazi Akademik Bakış
- Issue Year: 09/2016
- Issue No: 18
- Page Range: 167-186
- Page Count: 20
- Language: English