Wednesday, 30 April 2025

TURKEY'S FOBIDDEN ZONE AS THEY CONTROL LARGE PARTS OF IRAQ

 Life inside Iraq's 'Forbidden Zone' controlled by Turkey

A middle-aged man in a head scarf and brown jacket stares contemplativelyImage source,Phil Caller
Image caption,

For generations Sherwen Sergeli and his family have made a living from his village's land, but that's now under threat

For generations villagers have made a living growing pomegranates, almonds and peaches and foraging in the surrounding forests for wild fruits and spices.

But Sergele, located 16km (10 miles) from the border with Turkey, has become increasingly surrounded by Turkish military bases, which are dotted across the slopes.

One, perched halfway up the western ridge, looms over the village, while another in the east is under construction.

At least seven have been built here over the past two years, including one by a small dam that regulates Sergele's water supply, rendering it off limits to villagers.

"This is 100% a form of occupation of Kurdish [Iraqi Kurdistan] lands," says farmer Sherwan Sherwan Sergeli, 50, who has lost access to some of his land. "The Turks ruined it."

A panoramic shot of an attractive village with small houses and other buildings nestled among trees, greenery and farming land. Mountains loom over the village Image source,Phil Caller
Image caption,

Sergele, a village in the Iraqi Kurdistan region, is now on the front line of Turkey's war with the Kurdish militant PKK group

Sergele is now in danger of being dragged into what's known locally as the "Forbidden Zone" - a large strip of land in northern Iraq affected by Turkey's war with the Kurdish militant group the PKK, which launched an insurgency in southern Turkey in 1984.

The Forbidden Zone spans almost the entire length of the Iraqi border with Turkey and is up to 40km (25 miles) deep in places.

Community Peacemaker Teams, a human rights group based in Iraqi Kurdistan, says that hundreds of civilians have been killed by drone and air strikes in and around the Forbidden Zone. According to a 2020 Kurdistan parliamentary report, thousands have been forced off their land and whole villages have been emptied out by the conflict.

Sergele is now effectively on the front line of Turkey's war with the PKK.

When the BBC World Service Eye Investigations team visited the area, Turkish aircraft pummelled the mountains surrounding the village to root out PKK militants, who have long operated from caves and tunnels in northern Iraq.

Much of the land around Sergele had been burned by shelling. "The more bases they put up, the worse it gets for us," says Sherwan.

FULL ARTICLE AT: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c985lw7lywlo

No comments:

Post a Comment