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Iraqi Kurdistan: Five men free after protest jail terms

Iraqi Kurdistan: Five activists jailed after allegedly protesting Turkish military base released
MENA
3 min read
16 December, 2022
Five Kurdish activists were released by the Iraqi Kurdistan authorities after spending almost two years behind bars for their alleged participation in a protest against a Turkish military base.
Turkey's military presence in Iraqi Kurdistan is a source of frequent protests [Safin Hamed/AFP via Getty]

Five activists from the Iraqi Kurdish province of Duhok were freed from prison on Thursday, having served two-year sentences for allegedly taking part in a demonstration against Turkish military aggression in the area, a defence lawyer said.

The five men, from the town of Shiladze, allegedly took part in a  on 26 January 2019 after Turkish airstrikes killed at least six civilians a week prior.

The demonstration soon turned violent, with protesters storming and torching a . Two civilians were killed in the protest when Turkish and Iraqi Kurdish forces tried to disperse the angry crowd.

The five men - Nechirvan Badie, Mahmood Naji, Yusuf Shareef, Kovan Tariq, and Amjad Yousif - are among hundreds of people arrested by Kurdish security forces for "endangering the region's national security".

All five were freed on Thursday, Bashdar Hassan, a lawyer from the defence team told °®Âþµº in a brief phone call.  

"Unfortunately, the court was not independent in its trial of the five activists, and their sentence was a pure political penalty," Hassan said.

The prisoners were tortured by the Kurdish authorities while interrogated, the lawyer claimed.

Videos posted to social media show people in Shiladze jubilantly receiving the five men after their release from prison.

Under Iraqi law, the men were eligible for conditional release six months ago but were denied that right "due to the direct interference by the senior officials in the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG)", Ayhan Saeed, the representative of families of Duhok province prisoners told °®Âþµº.

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Saeed claimed the five men had been "subject to physical and psychological torture while in detention".

Turkey has established a series of military outposts inside the Iraqi Kurdistan region on the pretext of fighting militants from the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) who have bases in the mountains straddling Iraq's borders with Turkey and Iran.

The PKK, a Kurdish guerrilla force fighting for autonomy in Turkey, was formed in the late 1970s by militant leader Abdullah Ocalan.

It is listed as a "terrorist organisation" by Turkey, the US, the UK, and the EU, and its bloody conflict with the Turkish military has left at least 40,000 people dead since 1984, many of them civilians.

Turkey and Iran regularly conduct air and ground operations in neighbouring Iraqi Kurdistan to root out the PKK and Iranian Kurdish opposition parties. Civilians are often caught in the crossfire.