Kurdistan Islamic Movement
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Kurdistan Islamic Movement بزووتنەوەی ئیسلامی لە کوردستان Bizûtinewey Îslamî le Kurdistan | |
---|---|
Leader | |
Founder | Uthman Abd-Aziz |
Founded | 1979 |
Headquarters | Halabja |
Ideology | Kurdish nationalism Islamism |
Political position | Right-wing |
Religion | Islam |
International affiliation | |
Colours | black |
Seats in the Kurdistan Parliament: | 0 / 111 |
Website | |
basknet.org | |
The Kurdistan Islamic Movement (Kurdish: بزووتنهوی ئيسلامی له كوردستان, romanized: Bizûtinewey Îslamî le Kurdistan) is an Islamist group founded in 1987 by and several other Sunni mullahs who were all part of the non-political "Union of Religious Scholars" (Yaketi Mamostayani Ayni Islami). The party's main support comes from in and around that town of Halabjah. In the region controlled by the Islamic Movement in Kurdistan, the party established its own infrastructure but did not seek to apply Sharia law. Sheikh Uthman Abd al-Aziz was appointed as a mufti (religious judge) by the Islamic Movement of Kurdistan.
In the 1992 Kurdistan Region parliamentary election, the party received 5.1% of the vote, the third largest after the PUK and KDP. In 1993 the PUK ceded control of territory around Halabja, Tawella and Panjwin to the party after heavy fighting, and the party controlled Halabjah from 1998 to 2000.
In 1998 al-Aziz moved to Erbil with a number of followers. After Abdal-Aziz's death in 1999 the leadership of the party passed to his brother Mullah , who has his office in Halabjah.
Armed hostilities, which resulted in deaths were reported between the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, Islamic Groups, Kurdistan Workers Party, and the Kurdistan Democratic Party. The heaviest fighting began in September 2001, when a newly created Islamist group, the Ansar al-Islam, seized control of some villages near the Iranian border and attempted to institute a strictly Islamist theocratic regime.
According to press and opposition reporting, the Ansar al-Islam attacked Patriotic Union of Kurdistan fighters near Halabjah, killing dozens of persons. Intermittent fighting between the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, and the Ansar al-Islam, and other Islamic groups continued until late November, when an agreement between those involved and the Iranian Government imposed a cease-fire.
Islamic Movement of Kurdistan holds (2005) two ministerial posts in the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan-dominated government. This co-operation appears to be principally a temporary coalition dictated by pragmatic considerations. Islamic Movement is receiving aid from Iran[1] and is also said to receive money from other Islamic countries. Islamic Movement of Kurdistan has offices in various towns in Northern Iraq, including Suleimaniyya and Erbil.
During the 2010 Iraqi elections the party won some 40 thousand votes.[2]
A Saudi cable leak from WikiLeaks revealed that Saudi Arabia donated over half a million dollars to the party.[3][4]
See also[]
References[]
- ^ Cassman, Daniel. "Islamic Movement of Kurdistan | Mapping Militant Organizations". web.stanford.edu. Retrieved 2017-10-12.
- ^ http://www.rudaw.net/english/kurds/5330.html
- ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2015-06-27. Retrieved 2015-06-29.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ "Massud Barzani in WikiLeaks' Saudi Arabia cables". Kurd Net - Ekurd.net Daily News. 21 June 2015.
External links[]
- 1979 establishments in Iraq
- Islamic political parties in Iraq
- Kurdish Islamic organisations
- Kurdish Islamism
- Kurdish nationalism in Iraq
- Kurdish nationalist political parties
- Kurdish political parties in Iraq
- Organizations of the 1991 uprisings in Iraq
- Political parties established in 1979
- Political parties in Kurdistan Region
- Rebel groups in Iraq