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PolicyWatch #1111
Iranian Azeris: A Giant Minority
By Ali M. Koknar
June 6, 2006
Recently in Iran, tens of thousands of Iranian Azeris took to the streets
for several days of demonstrations touched off by the May 12 publication
of a racist cartoon in the state-run Iran newspaper. (The cartoon depicted
an Azeri-speaking cockroach.) Iranian security forces cracked down
violently on the demonstrators, killing at least four people (Azeri
nationalists claim twenty dead), injuring forty-three, and detaining
hundreds of others. These developments indicate brewing discontent among
Iran’s Azeri population and should be studied for their implications for
U.S. and Western policy toward Tehran.
Deeper Issues at Play
The Iranian regime’s effort to put out this ethnic brushfire by closing
the Tehran-based Iran newspaper and arresting its editor as well as the
ethnic Azeri cartoonist quickly escalated to the usual strongarm response
as the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps’ anti-riot units and Basij
militias attacked the Azeri protesters. Iranian security forces cracked
down on tens thousands of offended Azeris, who took to the streets in
Tehran and in the major northwestern Iranian cities such as Tabriz,
Urumieh, Ardebil, Maragheh, and Zenjan. The intelligence service launched
a massive detention campaign, rounding up relatives of Azeri Turks
previously jailed for Turkish nationalism.
The Iranian deputy interior minister for security affairs, Ali Asghar
Ahmadi, admitted that the demonstrations in Tabriz were far more than a
mere protest against a newspaper insult. In fact, there is much resentment
in Iranian Azerbaijan about the region’s economic and social difficulties.
That resentment is fed by the attitudes of ethnic Persians toward ethnic
Azeris—an attitude well captured in the phrase “Torki khar” (Turkish
donkey), used by Persians in reference to Azeris, whom they regard as the
“muscle” of the Iranian economy to be dominated by Persian “brains”.
Azeri Turks, concentrated mainly in the oil-poor northwest of Iran (along
the border with Turkey, Armenia, and Azerbaijan), make up an estimated
one-fourth of Iran’s population of 70 million. Azeris often claim a
population share close to 40 percent, a number that includes ethnic
brethren such as the Turkmen, Qashgais, and other Turkic-speaking groups.
Unlike other ethnic groups in Iran such as Sunni Kurds and Arabs, the
Azeri Turks are Shiites like the Persians. Divided from their kin in
Azerbaijan by the 1828 Treaty of Turkmanchai, which gave northern
Azerbaijan to Russia (that part of Azerbaijan gained independence after
the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991) and southern Azerbaijan to Iran,
the Azeris’ role in the Persian government was significantly weakened when
the Pahlavi dynasty came into power in 1925. Contact between the Azeri
areas of Iran and the Soviet Union were limited until Soviet forces
occupied northern Iran during World War II. In 1945, at Soviet
instigation, an Azerbaijan Democratic Republic was proclaimed in Iranian
Azerbaijan. It lasted only until Soviet forces withdrew a year later; in
the aftermath, some thousands of Iranian Azeris were killed.
Much as did imperial Iran, the Islamic regime has downplayed the ethnic
differences between Persians and Azeris. Despite the fact that influential
figures in the establishment, such as Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei, are of Azeri descent, the mullahs did not hesitate to crack down
hard on Azeri Turkish nationalism, using heavy weapons to put down a 1981
uprising in Tabriz and summarily executing hundreds of Azeris.
Azeris have had mixed relationships with other Iranian minorities. Kurds,
who make up around 14 percent of Iran’s population, do not have
particularly good relations with ethnic Azeris; several cities in western
Iran, such as Urumieh and Mako, are inhabited by both Kurds and by Azeri
Turks. In the last decade, the ethnic majority of the Azeri Turks in some
areas close to the border with Turkey has been diluted by immigration of
Kurds. The attitudes of the Turkic-speaking ethnic Turkmens, who live in
the part of Iran near the independent republic of Turkmenistan, are
unclear.
Growing Azeri Nationalism
The last fifteen years has seen a boom in nationalist publications for
Iranian Azeris and growing interest in both Turkey and the former Soviet
republic of Azerbaijan. A considerable number of Iranian Azeris watch
Turkish television broadcasts now available via satellite; this has
increased their knowledge of Turkey as well as the Anatolian dialect of
Turkish.
This revival led to the creation of a new organization, the South
Azerbaijan National Awakening Movement (Gamoh), by literature professor
Mahmudali Chohraganli. After winning election to the Iranian parliament in
1995, Chohraganli, whose own father was once tortured by the Shah’s secret
police for Turkish nationalism, was not allowed to take his seat. Gamoh
opposes what it calls “Persian chauvinism,” demanding more cultural rights
for Azeris, and a future Iranian government with a federal structure
resembling the United States in which Azeris can have their own flag and
parliament. Gamoh’s proclaimed support for self-determination, secular
government and a pro-Western orientation does not sit well with Tehran.
Its apparent popularity has put Gamoh squarely on Tehran’s radar screen.
Gamoh is run as a secret organization inside Iran. Its members, including
Chohraganli, who was jailed for two years and released in 1999 after
falling seriously ill, are often jailed or harassed by Iranian security
forces. Denied visas by both the Turkish and Azerbaijani governments,
Chohraganli was allowed to travel to the United States in 2002. In April
2005, bodies of two Gamoh members were found floating in the Aras River,
the boundary between Iran and Azerbaijan. In September 2005, the Iranian
government blamed Gamoh for the shooting of a government official in
Urumieh; Gamoh denied involvement. In March 2006, several Gamoh members
attended the Second World Azerbaijanis Congress in Baku. Following that
congress, several Gamoh members were arrested in Tabriz, and in April the
Iranian Azeri newspaper Navid Azerbaijan was banned.
The plight of Iranian Azeris is followed closely by their kin in
Azerbaijan and Turkey. But both the Azerbaijani and Turkish governments
take care not to damage their sensitive relations with the Iranian
government. Turkey recently stopped allowing a Chicago-based Azeri
television broadcaster, Gunaz, from using its satellite link. Gunaz is
known for its virulent opposition to Iran’s Islamic regime and its
separatist attitude since it went on the air in 2005. On the other hand,
Ankara has given Chohraganli permission to visit Turkey soon, and Gamoh
has an open presence there.
Azerbaijan is also walking a fine line between sympathy for the Iranian
Azeris and its economic and political interests with the Islamic regime.
Tehran recently consented to the opening of an Azerbaijani consulate
general in Tabriz, Iran’s largest Azeri-majority city. With annual
bilateral trade volume of $600 million, Iran is a major trading partner of
and an investor in Azerbaijan; Tehran also offers humanitarian aid to the
almost one million Azerbaijanis internally displaced from Nagorno-Karabakh
after Armenia occupied that part of Azerbaijan in 1993. Yet the
Azerbaijani public is largely sympathetic to the plight of Iranian Azeris.
“Baku, Tabriz, Ankara. Where are the Persians? Here we are!” chanted the
Azeri Turks in Baku this week as they protested the brutal treatment of
their ethnic kin by Iranian security forces. Many Azeri nationalists are
interested in uniting “North” Azerbaijan (the former Soviet republic) with
“South” Azerbaijan (the Iranian provinces).
Ethnic tensions in Iran have been on the rise with unpredictable results,
involving not just Azeris but also Kurds, Arabs, and Baluchs. The
government of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has only made these problems
worse.
Ali M. Koknar is the owner of AMK Risk Management, a private security
consultancy with offices in Washington, DC, and Turkey specializing in
counterterrorism and international organized crime.
Sourec: http://www.washingtoninstitute.org/templateC05.php?CID=2476
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