- Source: 1924 Kirkuk massacre
The Kirkuk Massacre of 1924 was a massacre perpetrated against the people of Kirkuk by the Assyrian Levies on May 4, 1924 following a series of attacks on the Assyrian Levies in Kirkuk and previous years after their settlement in Iraq. One notable attack which led to hostility between the Assyrians and Muslims was in August 1923 in Mosul in which two Assyrian children were killed by Muslims and no one was brought to justice.
In early 1924 the British deployed the Assyrian levies to Kirkuk province in order to capture the city of Sulaymaniyah, which was controlled by Kurd Sheikh Mahmud. The Muslims in Kirkuk threatened to attack Assyrian women as soon as the Assyrian Levies left Kirkuk to Sulaimanya.
On 4 May, an argument broke out between a Yezidi levy and a Muslim shopkeeper in Kirkuk's central market over prices which led to physical fighting. After the dispute, two more Assyrian Levies were wounded by Muslims after they were hit from behind with heavy sticks during a dispute. The Muslims were also taunting the Assyrians stating, "Now that half of you have gone to Chemchemal; we are not frightened of you." According to British documents, "Two Assyrian battalions then went back to the town, on the way they savagely assaulted number of Muslims sitting in coffee shop, destroying furniture and beating the customers." This was done after Muslims in the shop were making remarks towards the Assyrians who were passing by which started a riot between the Assyrians and Muslims. The Muslims of Kirkuk then began shooting at the Assyrians which resulted in several Assyrian deaths. The Assyrians Levies returned fire on the armed Muslims which resulted in 300+ Muslims in Kirkuk being killed. The total number of Assyrians killed was 5.
See also
Iraq Levies
Gavurbağı massacre
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Gereja di Timur
- 1924 Kirkuk massacre
- Gavurbağı massacre
- Iraqi Turkmen
- Iraqi Turkmen genocide
- Kirkuk
- List of massacres of Turkish people
- Treaty of Lausanne
- Iraqi–Kurdish conflict
- Kurds in Iraq
- Iraq Levies