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  • Kurds Plan Exodus From South Kazakstan

    KURDS PLAN EXODUS FROM SOUTH KAZAKSTAN
    By Elena Eliseeva

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting
    Jan 24 2008
    UK

    A uneasy calm may now prevail between Kurds and Kazaks after last
    autumn's violence, but most Kurds feel they have no option but
    to leave.

    Fearing for their physical safety, many ethnic Kurds say they plan
    to leave southern Kazakstan, as reports of low-level violence against
    them continue.

    Zara, an inhabitant of the southern city of Shymkent, says her family
    and many other local Kurds plan to sell up and leave following a
    spate of attacks on the community last November.

    "Of course we are afraid to leave - we have lived here all our lives -
    but we are also afraid to stay," Zara told IWPR.

    "We don't know what is coming next. The newspapers are writing
    bad things about us Kurds. If the community elders say so, we will
    certainly leave."

    The trouble dates from the end of October, when a Kurdish teenager
    from the village of Mayatas, in the Tolebi district of South Kazakstan
    region, was accused of sexually assaulting a four-year-old Kazak
    boy. (See previous IWPR story, Kazakstan: Ethnic Clash a Worrying
    Sign.) After the latter's father went to the police, locals took the
    law into their own hands and started burning and looting houses and
    beating up Kurds.

    The violence then spilled over into other towns and villages where
    to Kurds live.

    Although attacks on people and property soon died down, work to
    reconcile the communities and foster greater tolerance have not
    yielded results.

    Kurds in the South Kazakstan region interviewed by IWPR say although
    the mass looting has not recurred, small-scale incidents have
    continued.

    "We have a bad feeling," said one local from the Tolebi district.

    "Things are not the same as before."

    Official statistics suggest that there about 46,000 Kurds now living
    in Kazakstan, of whom 7,000 live in the South Kazakstan administrative
    region.

    The Kurds belong to a community deported wholesale from Armenia
    and Azerbaijan in 1937, and from Georgia in 1944. Like hundreds of
    thousands of Chechens, Volga Germans, Crimean Tatars and other ethnic
    groups, they were deemed suspect by Stalin, who ordered them to be
    shifted far into the interior of the Soviet Union.

    Kazim Nadirov, who heads the Kurdish National Centre in Shymkent,
    said the conflict was now frozen rather than resolved.

    Nadirov said that when cross-community meetings were arranged recently,
    Kurds found themselves being told to leave the area.

    "At all the meetings I took part in, there was only one subject -
    leave, full stop," he claimed. "Even when the public prosecutor was
    sitting next to me in those meetings... we were subjected to insults.

    I pointed out that as we are full citizens, they cannot say this
    and that we are as entitled to protection as they were. But that
    changed nothing."

    According to Nadirov, the majority of Kurds now have no confidence
    in their future.

    Local media reported that a complete reconciliation between the
    communities had taken place following a meeting of elders in Lenger,
    the administrative centre of Tolebi district.

    But members of the Kurdish community disagreed, some describing the
    meeting as humiliating.

    "They said from the platform, 'The Kurds are begging forgiveness,
    so we will forgive them," said one local Kurdish businessman. "But
    why should I ask to be forgiven? I have never seen this teenager. How
    can one blame a whole people for the crime of one person?"

    Nadirov said he believed most of the Kurds in South Kazakstan region
    would be gone by spring, once they looked at their options for
    resettling elsewhere.

    Moreover, attacks on Kurdish families have not stopped entirely, he
    said, adding that his cultural centre has recorded about 30 cases of
    arson attacks since the mass lootings of last year.

    "Most involve arsonists setting fire to the winter fodder set aside
    for the cattle," Nadirov said. "They burned more than 17 tons of hay
    belonging to one family. That family owned 400 head of cattle, but they
    had to sell them because without fodder, the cattle would have died."

    Other Kurds report acts of intimidation designed to make their lives
    impossible. One man aged 60 from the village of Kok-Tobe in the Ordabas
    district said he was the regular target of intimidation at the market.

    "When you take your sheep to the bazaar, the young men come up to
    you with a buyer and say, 'You will sell your sheep to this buyer for
    3,000 tenge each - when each one should cost no less than 15,000 tenge
    [around $120]," he said. "You can't do anything about it - you have
    to sell your livestock at that price."

    Local authorities have made no official pronouncements about the
    problem. When asked, they have tended to blame the situation on
    "outside interference".

    Sadu Bekenov, a member of the regional council for South Kazakstan
    region, claimed certain groups - which he did not identify - were
    exploiting the situation to stir up ethnic tensions.

    "You could say destructive forces have used this recent criminal
    offence, in order to give it a political tinge," he said."Someone
    is trying to inflame ethnic conflict with the help of young people
    who lack worldly experience and knowledge of history." According to
    Nadirov, the Kurds feel abandoned and defenceless.

    "It is difficult to be a nation without a homeland," he lamented. "If
    we had a country of our own with a consulate in Kazakstan, would this
    happen? I'm sure it wouldn't. But there's absolutely no one to stand
    up for us."
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