Year: 2024
The process of decolonisation has led to
the emergence of a number of ethnically complex states in the Middle East. The
present thesis addresses the Kurdish minority in Turkey, Iraq, Syria and Iran,
investigates and analyses the nature and structure of these four states. The
nature of the four states is complex in terms of their population; each one
contains more than one faith, ethnicity, and language. One ethnicity, faith or
sect may dominate the state which may not necessarily reflect the majority of
the population, for example, the minority of Alawis dominating Syria, or the
constitution, penal code and political system may be biased to a majority sect
(Shia in Iran). The present study investigates, compares and contrasts the
twenty-first century policies of Turkey, Syria, Iran and Iraq towards the
Kurds, it examines whether the concept of equal citizenship does exist or not
in the four states.
The
minority rights including the Kurds are the key to pluralism and peace in the Middle
East. Over the last 50 years, many Middle Eastern and North African minorities have
been oppressed or have struggled to survive, national groups (Berbers, Kurds, Turkmens,
etc.), religious communities (Christians, Zoroastrians, Baha'is, etc) or both (Armenians,
Jews, etc.). Sects, such as Shia in the Gulf States and Sunnis in Iran have not
been successfully integrated within Islam itself.
The central argument the present thesis
seeks to examine is how equal citizenship (equal access for political,
educational, social and economic institutions of the country) can be delivered
for the Kurds in the four countries. In order to achieve this, the legal status
of the Kurds needs to be changed via reforming and amending the constitution and
penal codes of the four states. Recognition of the legal rights of the Kurds
and abolishing the discriminatory laws are the cornerstone of a healthy civil
society and the key to pluralism and peace in the region.