The Anfal Campaign Against the Kurds
GENOCIDE IN IRAQ
The Anfal Campaign Against the Kurds. A
http://www.hrw.org/reports/1993/iraqanfal/
Introduction
Anfal was also the most vivid expression of the "special powers" granted to Ali Hassan al-Majid, a cousin of President Saddam Hussein and secretary general of the Northern Bureau of Iraq's Ba'ath Arab Socialist Party. From
The campaigns of 1987-1989 were characterized by the following gross violations of human rights:
• mass summary executions and mass disappearance of many tens of thousands of non-combatants, including large numbers of women and children, and sometimes the entire population of villages;
• the widespread use of chemical weapons, including mustard gas and the nerve agent GB, or Sarin, against the town of Halabja as well as dozens of Kurdish villages, killing many thousands of people, mainly women and children;
• the wholesale destruction of some 2,000 villages, which are described in government documents as having been "burned," "destroyed," "demolished" and "purified," as well as at least a dozen larger towns and administrative centers (nahyas and qadhas);
• the wholesale destruction of civilian objects by Army engineers, including all schools, mosques, wells and other non-residential structures in the targeted villages, and a number of electricity substations;
• looting of civilian property and farm animals on a vast scale by army troops and pro-government militia;
• arbitrary arrest of all villagers captured in designated "prohibited areas" (manateq al-mahdoureh), despite the fact that these were their own homes and lands;
• arbitrary jailing and warehousing for months, in conditions of extreme deprivation, of tens of thousands of women, children and elderly people, without judicial order or any cause other than their presumed sympathies for the Kurdish opposition. Many hundreds of them were allowed to die of malnutrition and disease;
• forced displacement of hundreds of thousands of villagers upon the demolition of their homes, their release from jail or return from exile; these civilians were trucked into areas of Kurdistan far from their homes and dumped there by the army with only minimal governmental compensation or none at all for their destroyed property, or any provision for relief, housing, clothing or food, and forbidden to return to their villages of origin on pain of death. In these conditions, many died within a year of their forced displacement;
• destruction of the rural Kurdish economy and infrastructure.
Like Nazi Germany, the Iraqi regime concealed its actions in euphemisms. Where Nazi officials spoke of "executive measures," "special actions" and "resettlement in the east," Ba'athist bureaucrats spoke of "collective measures," "return to the national ranks" and "resettlement in the south." But beneath the euphemisms,
The campaigns of 1987-1989 are rooted deep in the history of the Iraqi Kurds. Since the earliest days of Iraqi independence, the country's Kurds-who today number more than four million--have fought either for independence or for meaningful autonomy. But they have never achieved the results they desired.
In 1970, the Ba'ath Party, anxious to secure its precarious hold on power, did offer the Kurds a considerable measure of self-rule, far greater than that allowed in neighboring Syria, Iran or Turkey. But the regime defined the Kurdistan Autonomous Region in such a way as deliberately to exclude the vast oil wealth that lies beneath the fringes of the Kurdish lands. The Autonomous Region, rejected by the Kurds and imposed unilaterally by
In the wake of the autonomy decree, the Ba'ath Party embarked on the "Arabization" of the oil-producing areas of
After the KDP fled into
In the mid and late 1970s, the regime again moved against the Kurds, forcibly evacuating at least a quarter of a million people from
After 1980, and the beginning of the eight-year Iran-Iraq War, many Iraqi garrisons in Kurdistan were abandoned or reduced in size, and their troops transferred to the front. In the vacuum that was left, the Kurdish peshmerga--"those who face death"--once more began to thrive. The KDP, now led by one of Barzani's sons, Mas'oud, had revived its alliance with Teheran, and in 1983 KDP units aided Iranian troops in their capture of the border town of
Even more worrisome to
By this time the Iraqi regime's authority over the North had dwindled to control of the cities, towns, complexes and main highways. Elsewhere, the peshmerga forces could rely on a deep-rooted base of local support. Seeking refuge from the army, thousands of Kurdish draft-dodgers and deserters found new homes in the countryside. Villagers learned to live with a harsh economic blockade and stringent food rationing, punctuated by artillery shelling, aerial bombardment and punitive forays by the Army and the paramilitary jahsh. In response, the rural Kurds built air-raid shelters in front of their homes and spent much of their time in hiding in the caves and ravines that honeycomb the northern Iraqi countryside. For all the grimness of this existence, by 1987 the mountainous interior of Iraqi Kurdistan was effectively liberated territory. This the Ba'ath Party regarded as an intolerable situation.
With the granting of emergency powers to al-Majid in March 1987, the intermittent counterinsurgency against the Kurds became a campaign of destruction. As Raul Hilberg observes in his monumental history of the Holocaust:
A destruction process has an inherent pattern. There is only one way in which a scattered group can effectively be destroyed. Three steps are organic in the operation:
Definition | | Concentration (or seizure) | | Annihilation
This is the invariant structure of the basic process, for no group can be killed without a concentration or seizure of the victims, and no victims can be segregated before the perpetrator knows who belongs to the group.
The Kurdish genocide of 1987-1989, with the Anfal campaign as its centerpiece, fits Hilberg's paradigm to perfection.
There remain many unsolved mysteries about the Anfal campaign, some of which may be answered by future study of the captured Iraqi documents.
The identity of the uniformed men who made up the Anfal firing squads may remain forever a secret. Were they Amn agents? Members of the Republican Guard? Or were they, as seems more likely, "comrades" of the Ba'ath Party itself?
Why were the women and children only killed in certain areas? Did their execution reflect patterns of combat and resistance, or was some other criterion used? Where are the graves of all those who died, and how many bodies do they hold? The answer cannot conceivably be less than 50,000, and it may well be twice that number.
When Kurdish leaders met with Iraqi government officials in the wake of the spring 1991 uprising, they raised the question of the Anfal dead and mentioned a figure of 182,000--a rough extrapolation based on the number of destroyed villages.
Ali Hassan al-Majid reportedly jumped to his feet in a rage when the discussion took this turn. "What is this exaggerated figure of 182,000?" he is said to have asked. "It couldn't have been more than 100,000"- as if this somehow mitigated the catastrophe that he and his subordinates had visited on the Iraqi Kurds.
The identity of the executioners, and the precise number of their victims, may never be known--or at least not until the files in
Al-Majid appears almost defensive in talking about the Anfal operation with unnamed Northern Bureau officials in January 1989. "How were we supposed to convince them to solve the Kurdish problem and slaughter the saboteurs?" he asks them, alluding to the misgivings of senior military officers about the Anfal operation. In addition, he adds, what was to be done with so many captured civilians? "Am I supposed to keep them in good shape?" al-Majid asks. "What am I supposed to do with them, these goats?...Take good care of them? No, I will bury them with bulldozers." And that is what he did.
The above is the Introduction to a much longer report.
The full report can be accessed at http://www.hrw.org/reports/1993/iraqanfal/
Here is a list of chapter headings:
Chapter One:
Ba'athis and Kurds
Kurdish Autonomy and Arabization
Exploiting Kurdish Divisions
1985-1987: Open War
Chapter Two:
Prelude to Anfal
The Chemical Threshold
The Spring 1987 Campaign: Village Destruction and Resettlement
Early Uses of al-Majid's Special Powers
Orders for Mass Killing
Defining the "National Ranks": The Census of
Chapter Three:
First Anfal: The Siege of Sergalou and Bergalou, February 23-
The March 16 Chemical Attack on Halabja
The Fall of the PUK Headquarters
Chapter Four:
Second Anfal: Qara Dagh, March 22-
The Exodus from Qara Dagh
Flight to Southern Germian
Chapter Five:
Third Anfal: Germian,
The Plan of Campaign: (1) Tuz Khurmatu
The Plan of Campaign: (2) Qader Karam and Northern Germian
The Plan of Campaign: (3) Sengaw and Southern Germian
The Collection Points
The Ambiguous Role of the Jahsh
Chapter Six:
Fourth Anfal: The Valley of the Lesser Zab,
The Chemical Attacks on Goktapa and Askar
The Anfal Dragnet: East of Taqtaq
The Shwan Area
Zbeida's Story
The Fourth Anfal Collection Points
Chapter Seven:
Fifth, Sixth and Seventh Anfals: The
The PUK's Last Stand
Chapter Eight: The Camps
The Popular Army Camp at Topzawa
The Popular Army Camp at Tikrit
The Prisoners from Bileh and Halabja
The Women's Prison at Dibs
A Prison Camp for the Elderly
Deaths at Nugra Salman
Chapter Nine: The Firing Squads
Muhammad's Story
Ozer, Omar and Ibrahim
Mustafa's Story
Taymour's Story
Chapter Ten: Final Anfal: Badinan, August 25-September 6, 19
Badinan on the Eve of the Final Anfal
"Apples and Something Sweet": The Chemical Attacks of
On-the-Spot Mass Executions
The Fort at Dohuk and the Women's Prison at Salamiyeh
Chapter Eleven: The Amnesty and its Exclusions
Dispersal of the
The Mujamma'a Dumping Operation
The Fate of the Christians and Yezidis
Chapter Twelve: Aftermath
Continued Village Clearances
Continued Mass Killings: Yunis's Story
Continued Mass Killings: Hussein's Story
The End of the "Exceptional Situation"
Chapter Thirteen: The Vanishing Trial
The Ba'ath Party: Alpha and Omega of the Anfal Campaign
Appendices
Appendix A: The Ali Hassan al-Majid Tapes
Appendix B: The Perpetrators of Anfal: A Road-Map to the Principal Agencies and Individuals
Appendix C: Known Chemical Attacks in Iraqi
Appendix D: Sample Mass Disappearances During Anfal, by Region
Appendix E: Glossary of Arabic and Kurdish Terms