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Kurdish Human Rights Project: This is the legacy website of the Kurdish Human Rights Project, containing reports and news pertaining to human rights issues in the Kurdish Regions for 20 years.

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2007 News
KHRP Calls for Investigation after Fresh Evidence Raises Concern for Health of Abdullah

 

According to information recently provided to the Kurdish Human Rights Project Legal Team, a hair sample of Abdullah Öcalan's has recently been obtained through covert means which (because of a need to protect the source), the KHRP Legal Team is not at this stage at liberty to disclose.

The samples have been submitted for testing and according to a report from a leading European professor of pharmacology and senior public health official “the [body sample] analysed has elevated levels of chromium (moderately elevated) and of strontium (markedly elevated)”.

Although the professor identifies some uncertainty because the amount of sample was small, he expresses the conclusion that “it seems very likely that the subject from whom the…sample originates has been exposed to a high dose of strontium acutely and/or chronically”.

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ECtHR Delivers Judgement on KHRP Village Destruction Case

 

The European Court of Human Rights has ruled against Turkey in the case of Aksakal v. Turkey , finding the state did not provide effective remedy for violations of human rights, in this village destruction case.

The case concerns the destruction the dwellings and farmland of Görbeyli, a village in south-east Turkey by security forces in June 1995. The applicant Mr Halis Aksakal brought a complaint to the Court with the help of KHRP on 3 November 1995, seeking redress under several articles of the European Convention of Human Rights (ECHR), most notably articles 3 (freedom from torture and ill treatment), 8 (right to respect of family life and home) and 13 (right to an effective domestic remedy to ECHR violations).

The Court rightly ruled ‘that there were serious defects in the investigation conducted by the authorities' following complaints by Mr Aksakal subsequent to the events of June 1995. It therefore held that there had been a violation of Article 13 of the ECHR.

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Renowned Kurdish-Iranian Filmmaker Banned from Shooting in Iran by Iranian Censors

 

Kurdish Human Rights Project is disturbed to learn that Bahman Ghobadi, director of many award-winning films including Turtles Can Fly has been banned from filming in his native Iran.

In a press statement dated 19 January, Ghobadi stated that he first learned of the ban on a cinema website on which the Cinema Department in the Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance had announced ‘Under current circumstances and according to numerous reasons and based on regulations production of any film by Bahman Ghobadi is not within the professional filmmaking agenda of the General Censors Office’. Though he initially believed that there had been some sort of misunderstanding, enquiries by his office did not elicit any formal denial of the ban by officials.


This ban comes on the heels of increasing difficulties and obstacles faced by the director in the production of his previous film Half Moon, for which, he claims, he was subjected to accusations of being a separatist, despite statements on his part that he regards himself ‘as an Iranian Kurd and condemn(s) even an inch of my country to be disintegrated’. Although in the past Ghobadi has remained silent during government-instigated disruption to his work, his recent press release stated ‘if the Censors Office in the Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance refuses to issue a permit for the making of my new film, I will personally take action and start its shooting in the streets of Tehran’.


In reaction to news of the ban, KHRP Executive Director Kerim Yildiz stated ‘Iranian cinema, in particular the work of Bahman Ghobadi, is held in the highest esteem worldwide, a symbol of the cultural richness of Iran and the creativity of its citizens. Kurdish Human Rights Project calls on the Iranian authorities immediately to lift this needless and damaging restriction on free expression and to allow the work of Ghobadi to continue unhindered.’
 

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KHRP European Parliament Initiative to Explore High Suicide Rates amongst Women in Kurdish Regions

 

KHRP has completed a fact-finding mission to the Kurdish regions of Turkey and Iraq where the suicide rates amongst women have been on the increase. The mission sought to establish the situation of women living there and the issues contributing to these high suicide rates.

The mission, which was commissioned and funded by the European Parliament, was carried out by KHRP Consultant on Women and Children's Rights Margaret Owen, KHRP Advisory Board member Gillian Higgins, KHRP Deputy Director Rachel Bernu, Tanyel B. Taysi of University of Kurdistan-Hewler, KHRP Fellow Chnoor Amin and KHRP Research Project Team Member Handan Coskun .

The mission found that statistics on the subject were difficult to come by in Turkey since the government does not include ethnicity in official documentation and a fear of officialdom is pervasive amongst the families affected. The mission further observed that many recorded suicides may indeed have other causes, given cultural habits in both Turkey and Iraqi Kurdistan which allow forced suicides to take place with impunity.

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KHRP sends Fact-Finding Mission to investigate Human Rights Situation in Kurdish regions of Iraq

KHRP Deputy Director Rachel Bernu has completed a January fact-finding mission to northern Iraq . The mission comprised visits to Sulemanya , Dohuk and Arbil in the KRG, as well as to Kirkuk . Ms. Bernu met with government, intergovernmental and NGO representatives, seeking to establish an understanding of the human rights situation in a region that has seen so much change over the past four years.

The mission's particular focuses were the treatment of minorities, investigative and pre-detention practices, corruption, as well as the extent of access to basic rights such as the right to housing and the right to life. The mission was chiefly concerned to observe that there was a lack of consistency in the enforcement of rights, a lack of public awareness of these rights and that women's human rights are, as a result, the most regularly violated.

A full report of the mission will be available in the coming months.

 

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION:

Kurdish Human Rights Project
11 Guilford Street, London, WC1N 1DH
Tel: 020 7405 3835
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Kurdish Human Rights Project is an independent, non-political human rights organisation dedicated to the promotion and protection of the human rights of all people in the Kurdish regions. It is a registered charity, founded and based in London

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