Battle of Şırnak

Battle of Şırnak
Part of Kurdish–Turkish conflict

Location of Şırnak city and province in Turkey
DateAugust 18 August 21, 1992[1]
LocationŞırnak, Turkey
Result Destruction of the town of Şırnak[2]
Belligerents
 Turkey YDG-H
Casualties and losses
40 killed[3] 85 killed[3]
253 arrested[3]
22 civilians killed[3]
20,000 displaced[3]

The Battle of Şırnak was a major battle broke out in the city of Şırnak between local Kurdish youth groups affiliated to YDG-H with support from the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) and Turkish security forces[3] from August 18 to August 21, 1992,[1] after YDG-H members had built barricades.[4] During this battle over 20,000 of Şırnak's 25,000 inhabitants fled the town due to the violence. According to Turkish authorities, a total of 147 people were killed including 40 members of security forces, 85 rebels and 22 civilians.[3]

According to the Turkish government, the clashes started when a large force of PKK guerrillas attacked government buildings in Şırnak on the night of August 18, and that security forces responded by bombing, heavy shelling and firing on rebel positions in local houses and shops. The PKK however denied they had launched the attacks that sparked the battle, which continued for over 48 hours. Following the battle a curfew was imposed in the town.[1]

Similar operations were later launched in the towns of Kulp in Diyarbakır Province on October 3, 1992,[2] and Varto in Muş Province on September 17, 1996.[4]

Controversy

Amnesty International identified 15 of the civilians killed as Hezni Erkol, Güler Sökmen (13), Zehra Koval, Veysi Sökmen (6), Halime Kürtel, Sema Sökmen (9), Süleyman Kürtel, Kumru Güngen, Abdulaziz Besin, Gülüm Güngen (6), Haci Kiliç, Menive Güngen (14), Yusuf Vatan, Ibrahim Artuç and Yusuf Yaman. They claimed that reporters "were prevented from speaking to local political officials by the police, and there was no way to get an objective account of what had happened" and that "those who managed to approach reporters in secrecy could only say they were under fire for two days and claim that tanks and cannons were used to hit buildings occupied by civilians." They also claimed there were further attacks on civilians in villages surrounding Şırnak. On 26 August, Amnesty International sent requests to Turkish Prime Minister, Süleyman Demirel, Interior Minister Ismet Sezgin, Emergency Legislation Governor Ünal Erkan and Şırnak province governor Mustafa Mala, to immediately initiate an independent and impartial inquiry into the events, to ensure no-one was mistreated in police custody and to make their findings public.[1]

British journalist Christopher de Bellaigue, in his book Rebel Land: Among Turkey's Forgotten People claimed that "when the dust settled, and guerilla numbers were revised steadily downwards and locals started to talk, it became clear that there had been no PKK force, not even a small one [present in the town]. The battle of Sirnak had not been a battle but a drawn out punitive spasm, a two-day spree by vandals wearing the colours of the Turkish state and trashing anything they saw"[4]

See also

References

Sources

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