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Iran’s main Kurdish party says its armed guerrillas will return to Iran

Gulan Media September 20, 2016 News
Iran’s main Kurdish party says its armed guerrillas will return to Iran
ERBIL, Kurdistan Region – Iran’s main armed Kurdish party said it is giving up a two-decade ceasefire with the Iranian government and returning its guerrilla fighters to Iran, but will not initiate hostilities unless attacked.



In an interview with BBC Persian, to be aired in full Tuesday afternoon, Mustafa Hijri, the secretary general of the Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan (PDKI), said it was time for his party to take a new approach, including returning troops back to Iran from border bases in Iraq.



“After the passing of two decades during which our Peshmerga were absent among the people (in Iran), we are doing this again, that our Peshmerga make a presence among our people,” Hijri told BBC Persian.



“This means, if our Peshmerga make a presence in Iran and the Islamic Republic of Iran does not initiate attacks on them, we would not attack them, either.” he said



He explained the objective behind the new approach is for his party to have its “Peshmerga among the people, encourage and organize them and do political work with the people.”



The new approach, he claimed, had already been implemented last year, but “because the Islamic State (of Iran) did not attack our Peshmerga forces, there was no confrontation.”



With some 2,000 Peshmerga forces based in remote bordering areas, mainly in the Kurdistan Region, the PDKI is historically considered the most formidable Kurdish military organization opposing the Islamic Republic in Tehran.



Hassan Sharafi, second-in-command of the PDKI, told Rudaw TV last July that his forces had silenced its guns against Iran for the sake of the Kurdistan Region. But he noted it “ is not fair for one part of Kurdistan to sacrifice the interest of all other parts of Kurdistan for its own sake.”



Last May and June, there were clashes between armed groups from the PDKI and the Iranian security forces that resulted in tens dead or wounded on both sides. The Iranian government responded by shelling the border areas inside the Kurdistan Region.



On Saturday, Iran’s artillery attacked the Kurdistan Region’s northeastern border, which led to the displacement of at least 70 Kurdish families. The PDKI first said on its twitter account that its bases were the target, alongside civilians and agricultural lands, but in subsequent tweets it made no reference to the PDKI bases.



As to why the Iranian Kurds need a military presence in Iran, Hijri said that the 20-year ceasefire “did not result in less militarization by Iran.”



He added that Iran, through its military approach, has proved it is very sensitive towards his party and other parties in Iran’s Kurdistan, often jailing its members and prosecuting them and that the presence of armed groups provides reassurance for the people.



“The presence of our armed Peshmerga is a strong and open support for our people,” he said.



He admitted that not all the people of (Iranian) Kurdistan support his party’s approach, but that “the majority of people demand it.”



In light of the resumed clashes, Hijri told Israel’s Jerusalem Post in late July that Israel should support opposition groups which are against Iran -- a controversial statement that yet again had Iranian authorities accusing the group of being a proxy for regional countries.



Hijri said Iran already supports groups like the Palestinian Hamas and the Lebanese Hezbollah, who oppose Israel. Therefore, “Israel should be providing help to opposition groups standing against Iran.”



And just recently, a member of Hijri’s party appeared on Arabic media in Saudi Arabia attending the Hajj pilgrimage. His presence was interpreted by the Iranian media as PDKI and Saudi Arabia having some agreements.



Asked about this particular incident, Hijri denied they have any agreements with Saudi Arabia, or any other country.



“We have never had any meeting with the officials from Saudi Arabia, neither in Iraqi Kurdistan nor anywhere else in the world. We do not have any contract with any neighboring country or any other country regarding our struggle,” he said.


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