The Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan (PDKI; Kurdish: حیزبی دێموکراتی کوردستانی ئێران, romanized: Hizbi Dêmukrati Kurdıstani Êran, HDKI; Persian: حزب دموکرات کردستان ایران, romanized: Ḥezb-e Demokrāt-e Kordestān-e Īrān), also known as the Kurdish Democratic Party of Iran (KDPI), is an armed leftist separatist movement of Kurds, exiled in northern Iraq with branch offices in Europe.[26] It is banned in Iran and thus not able to operate openly.[27] The group calls for either separatism in Iran or a federal system.[28][29][16]
Qazi Mehemed founded the PDKI in Mehabad, Iran, on 16 August 1945.[32] On 22 January 1946, Qazi Mehemed declared a Kurdish Republic of Kurdistan, of which he formally became president. The Republic lasted less than a year: after the USSR retreated from the area, the Imperial Iranian army first reclaimed Iranian Azerbaijan, followed by Mehabad on 15 December 1946.[33] After the fall of the Republic, many of the PDKI leaders were arrested and executed, effectively ending the party.[34]
Against Unification of Iran
The PDKI cooperated with the Tudeh party and saw a short revival under the anti-Shah administration of Mohammad Mosaddegh (1951–53), but this ended after Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi took full control again in the 1953 Iranian coup d'état. In 1958, the PDKI was on the verge of unifying with the Iraqi Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP), but was then dismantled by the SAVAK secret police. The remains of the PDKI continued to support the KDP, but this changed as the Shah started aiding the KDP, which fought against the Iraqi regime that had overthrown the royal Hashemite dynasty. In return for the Shah's aid, the KDP decreased its support for the PDKI.[35]
The PDKI reorganised itself, marginalising its pro-KDP leader Abdullah Ishaqi (also known as Ehmed Tewfiq), adding new Communist and nationalist members, and forming the Revolutionary Committee to continue the struggle against the Iranian regime. The Committee began an unsuccessful revolution in March 1967, ending after 18 months.[32][34][35]
After reforms by a new leader, Abdurreman Qasımlo, the PDKI fought alongside Islamic and Marxist movements against the Shah, culminating in the 1979 Iranian Revolution.[36][35]Khomeini's new Islamic Republic, however, refused the Kurdish demands, suppressing the PDKI and other Kurdish parties. The PDKI continued its activities in exile, hoping to achieve "Kurdish national rights within a Democratic Federal Republic of Iran".[34]
Against the Islamic Republic
In January 1981, Iraq supported the party in the Iranian cities of Nowdesheh and Qasr-e Shirin and provided weapons supplies to the PKDI.[37] This move was made so as the party stops Tehran from using the Tehran-Baghdad highway. The PKDI hoped as well to establish a level of autonomy in the area. However, the Iranian forces staged a series of debilitating attacks against the KDPI, leaving them a "marginal military factor during much of the Iran–Iraq War".[37]
In 2016, the organization announced it was reviving its armed struggle following death of Farinaz Khosravani and subsequent Mahabad riots.[39]
Mykonos restaurant assassinations
Sadıq Şerefqendi's murder became an international incident between Germany and Iran. On 17 September 1992, PDKI leaders Sadegh Sharafkandi, Fettah Abduli, Humayûn Erdelan and their translator Nûri Dêkurdi were assassinated at the Mykonos Greek restaurant in Berlin, Germany.[40] In the Mykonos trial, the courts found Kazem Darabi, an Iranian national who worked as a grocer in Berlin, and Lebanese Abbas Rhayel, guilty of murder and sentenced them to life in prison. Two other Lebanese, Youssef Amin and Mohamed Atris, were convicted of being accessories to murder. In its 10 April 1997 ruling, the court issued an international arrest warrant for Iranian intelligence minister Hojjat al-Islam Ali Fallahian[41] after declaring that the assassination had been ordered by him with knowledge of Grand Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and President Ayatollah Rafsanjani.[42]
Vienna assassination
On 13 July 1989, the then PDKI leader Abdurreman Qasımlo arrived in Vienna with his delegation to have talks with Iranian diplomats regarding the terms of reconciliation between the central government in Tehran and the Kurds. Those were not the only talks with Iran held in Vienna. After they entered the conference hall and the talks started, the Iranian "diplomats" took out automatic weapons and murdered all of the members of the Kurdish delegation, including Abdurrehman Qasımlo.[43]
2016 bomb attack
The year 2016 an Iranian agent had planted a bomb near the Castle which led to 6 KDP and KDPI members getting killed.
2018 missile attack on the Democrat Castle
On the 8th September 2018 the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Aerospace Force launched seven Fateh 110 missiles at the Democrat Castle while a meeting was underway. The missiles got a direct hit on where the meeting was taking place at the Democrat Castle killing a total of 18 KDP and KDPI members. 50 KDP/KDPI members were injured, including KDP leaders Xalıd Ezizi and Mustefa Mewlûdi. A number of important members and commanders were killed, including Mehemed Hesenpûr, Nesrin Hedad and Rehman Piroti.
2022 Attack on the Rojhelat primary school and the September - October attacks
2022 the IRGC and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps send one Ballistic missile and several drones which attacked a school at Azadi Settlement and the missile nearly hit the school but instead got a hit beside the school which killed 17 teachers and parents and thereafter killing 1 child. After the attacks on the school Iranian helicopters was flying around the area and threw down triangle spikes which made it hard for cars to drive between the school, Azadi Settlement, Amiriya Settlement and Democrat Castle. Thereafter on September 28 the U.S that also had shot down a Qods - Mohajer-6 drone with a F-15 after it posed a threat to U.S. forces in the area. Some similar continued in the coming days, and casualties had increased to 18 deaths and 62 injuries on October 4. On November 14, Iranian airstrikes hit on the Democrat Castle operating in Iraqi Kurdistan continued, killing at least two people and injuring 10 other KDPI members. With these attacks 72 Kurdish and KDPI members getting injured and 37 Kurdish and KDPI members getting killed.
PDKI congresses
The PDKI has held fifteen congresses. These occurred in 1945, 1964, 1973, 1980, 1982, 1984, 1985, 1988, 1992, 1995, 1997, 2000, 2004, 2008, 2012, and 2018.[44]
PDKI has had a lot of different headquarters including in both Iranian Kurdistan and Iraqi Kurdistan, here is a list of all the Headquarters that PDKI has had over the years:
The military wing of the PDKI is named PDKI Peshmerga.
Reunity
Both wings of PDKI and PDK reunited on August 21, 2022 and build the Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan once again.
New leading team
The leading team until the joint Congress calls Executive Board. This board has 12 members leading by Mustefa Hicri.
The leading team abroad or Executive Board Abroad has 6 members who are: Köstan Gadani, Azad Ezizi, Mehemed Resûl Kerimi, Aso Salıh, Kawe Ebdeli and Rehim Mehemedzade.
^ abcdNeuberger, Benyamin (2014). Bengio, Ofra (ed.). Kurdish Awakening: Nation Building in a Fragmented Homeland. University Of Texas Press. p. 268. ISBN978-0-292-75813-1.
^Monshipouri, Mahmood (2008). "Kurds". Iran Today: An Encyclopedia of Life in the Islamic Republic. Vol. 1. Greenwood Press. p. 223. ISBN978-0-313-34163-2.
^David McDowall (1992). The Kurds: A Nation Denied. Minority Rights Group. p. 70. ISBN978-1-873194-30-0. The KDPI (which had moved to the left in the meantime) adopted an anti-imperialist position, declaring their opposition to the Shah's regime...
^Abbas Valli (2014). Kurds and the State in Iran: The Making of Kurdish Identity. I.B.Tauris. p. 28. ISBN978-1-78076-823-6.
^Rodolfo Stavenhagen (2016). Ethnic Conflicts and the Nation-State. Springer. p. 98. ISBN978-1-349-25014-1.
^ abMark Edmond Clark (2016). "An Analysis of the Role of the Iranian Diaspora in the Financial Support System of the Mujahedin-e-Khalq". In David Gold (ed.). Terrornomics. Routledge. pp. 67–68. ISBN978-1-317-04590-8.
^ abHiro, Dilip (2013). "Kurdish Democratic Party of Iran". A Comprehensive Dictionary of the Middle East. Interlink Publishing. ISBN978-1-62371-033-0.
^ abJeffrey S. Dixon; Meredith Reid Sarkees (2015). "INTRA-STATE WAR #816: Anti-Khomeini Coalition War of 1979 to 1983". A Guide to Intra-state Wars: An Examination of Civil, Regional, and Intercommunal Wars, 1816-2014. SAGE Publications. pp. 384–386. ISBN978-1-5063-1798-4.
^Razoux, Pierre (2015). The Iran-Iraq War. Harvard University Press. Appendix E: Armed Opposition. ISBN978-0-674-91571-8.
^ abAlex Peter Schmid; A. J. Jongman (2005). "Kurdish Democratic Party of Iran". Political terrorism: a new guide to actors, authors, concepts, data bases, theories, & literature. Transaction Publishers. p. 579. ISBN978-1-4128-0469-1.
^Belgin San-Akca (2016). States in Disguise: Causes of State Support for Rebel. Oxford University Press. p. 95. ISBN978-0-19-025090-4. For example, the Soviet Union supported the Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan (KDPI), first against the shah's regime in Iran and then against the religious revolutionary regime. Throughout the Cold War period, the Soviet funds were regularly channeled to the KDPI.
^Entessar, Nader (2010). Kurdish Politics in the Middle East. Lanham: Lexington Books. p. 48. ISBN978-0-7391-4039-0. OCLC430736528. Throughout much of the 1980s, the KDPI received aid from the Ba'thi regime of Saddam Hussein, but Ghassemlou broke with Baghdad in 1988 after Iraq used chemical weapons against Kurds in Halabja and then forced Kurdish villagers to...
^David Romano (2006). The Kurdish Nationalist Movement: Opportunity, Mobilization and Identity. Cambridge University Press. p. 251. ISBN978-0-521-68426-2. The Iraqi PUK and Iranian KDPI have often assisted each other, and roughly 5,000 Kurdish volunteers from Turkey went to Iran to fight Khomeini's government forces in 1979.
^Joseph R. Rudolph Jr. (2015). Encyclopedia of Modern Ethnic Conflicts, 2nd Edition [2 volumes]. ABC-CLIO. p. 490. ISBN978-1-61069-553-4. Moreover, in August 2012, the KDPI and the Komala, now led by Abdullah Mohtadi, reached a strategic agreement calling for federalism in Iran to undo the national oppression suffered by the Kurds.
^Zabir, Sepehr (2012). Iran Since the Revolution (RLE Iran D). Taylor & Francis. pp. 108–110. ISBN978-1-136-83300-7.
^Michael M. Gunter (2010). Historical Dictionary of the Kurds. Scarecrow Press. p. 133. ISBN978-0-8108-7507-4. During the late 1940s and the early 1950s, the Kurdistan Democratic Party of Iran (KDPI) cooperated closely with the Tudeh, or Iranian Communist Party.
^Hussein Tahiri (2007). The Structure of Kurdish Society and the Struggle for a Kurdish State. Bibliotheca Iranica: Kurdish studies series. Vol. 8. Mazda Publications. p. 144. ISBN978-1-56859-193-3. Between 1984 and 1991, the KDPI and Komala fought each other vigorously.
^ abBuchta, Wilfried (2000), Who rules Iran?: the structure of power in the Islamic Republic, Washington DC: The Washington Institute for Near East Policy, The Konrad Adenauer Stiftung, pp. 102, 104, ISBN978-0-944029-39-8
^United Kingdom: Home Office, Country Information and Guidance - Iran: Kurds and Kurdish political groups, July 2016, Version 2.0, available at: http://www.refworld.org/docid/578f67c34.html [accessed 18 March 2017]
^"Freedom House", Freedom in the World 2011: The Annual Survey of Political Rights and Civil Liberties, Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2011, p. 321, ISBN978-1-4422-0996-1
^Hyeran Jo (2015). Compliant Rebels: Rebel Groups and International Law in World Politics. Cambridge University Press. pp. 125–126. ISBN978-1-107-11004-5.
^ abGhassemlou, A.R. (1993). "Kurdistan in Iran". In Gérard Chaliand (ed.). A People Without a Country: The Kurds and Kurdistan. London: Zed Books. pp. 106–118. ISBN978-1-85649-194-5.
^Roger Howard (2004). Iran in Crisis?: The Future of the Revolutionary Regime and the US Response. Indiana Series in Middle East Studies. Zed Books. p. 185. ISBN978-1-84277-475-5.