http://www.debka-net-weekly.com/

Three Ethnic Uprisings in Iran

Secret Agents Liquidate Prominent Kurdish Separatist Leader
 

Iran's Kurdish community is up in arms over the assassination by 50 
Iranian special operations agents of Shuhan Kadiri, their most 
prominent leader.

Kadiri, who preached Kurdish independence as a member of an 
underground Kurdish organization called the Revolutionary Union of 
Kurdistan, was cut down by dozens of bullets on July 16 when Iranian 
agents burst into a coffee-house in Mahabad in the Kurdish region of 
northern Iran. Within hours of the assassination, Kurdish villages 
and towns were afire with reports of their hero's death as a martyr 
to the cause of Kurdish independence. A new legend claimed that the 
waters of the fountain in the square outside the coffee-house had 
turned red at the moment of his death. There was also a gruesome 
report that his Iranian murderers had tied Kadiri's body to a 
motorcycle and dragged it to the next town.

All these reports and rumors galvanized Kurdish clerics into issuing 
the next day a proclamation glorifying the dead man as a martyr 
murdered for venturing to fly the Kurdish flag.
Kurdish fury did not stop there.
DEBKA-Net-Weekly's Iranian sources report that the assassination was 
the signal for the launching of a Kurdish guerrilla war against 
Tehran.

The Iranian government thus finds itself confronted with three 
domestic ethnic warfronts: in oil-rich Khuzestan, it faces ethnic 
Arabs; in Balochistan in the southeast, a guerrilla war is already 
raging - and now one has been sparked in the Kurdish region too.
The Balochis declared war over a similar incident to the one that 
enraged the Kurds. On July 7, an Iranian assassination squad 
murdered their national leader Murad ben Abbas by poisoning his food.
 
Iran faces three uprisings by Kurds, Balochis and Khuzestani Arabs
 
On July 11, thousands of Balochi rioters attacked government offices 
and the courthouse in Saravan, a town near the Pakistani border. The 
Iranian army opened fire on the protesters, they shot back and 
battles went on that night and the next day. No reliable casualty 
figures are available, but it inevitably ran into scores on both 
sides.
Balochi fury spread the next day to Zahedan, capital of Iranian 
Balochistan.

This week, the Balochi Ashari tribes joined the resistance to the 
Tehran government, ambushing Iranian military convoys with rocket-
propelled grenades and automatic rifles.
There is little doubt that Western intelligence agents on the ground 
are helping to foment the riots and clashes in all three restive 
regions.

Mass riots and guerrilla operations flared this week in the Kurdish 
towns of Sanandaj, Biyar, Oshnouiyeh, Orumiyeh, Mahabad, Saqqez and 
Saindezh. The rioters attacked and set on fire government buildings, 
and the homes of Kurds known to collaborate with the central 
government were looted and torched to calls of death to Iran's 
leaders. Singled out was the home of the Kurdish ayatollah Mulla 
Sohrebi who favors Iran's spiritual overlord Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
Tuesday, July 26, Kurdish guerrilla units made their first 
appearance in 25 years.

Firing rocket-propelled grenades and automatic rifles, they struck 
two Revolutionary Guards camps in Sar Dast, a town west of Saqqez 
not far from the border of Iraqi Kurdistan.

At least 15 Iranian troops were killed and 20 injured. Tehran 
retaliated by sending heavy military reinforcements to the Kurdish 
region, imposing a night curfew on all Kurdish towns and roads and, 
as we write these lines, Revolutionary Guards units are surrounding 
Kurdish towns. 

Their commanders have summoned the mayors, town dignitaries and 
clerics and presented them with an ultimatum: surrender the heads of 
the Kurdistan Revolutionary Union hiding in their towns or else the 
troops will storm in and seize them by force.









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