Anfal Never Ended: 182,000 Kurds Dead and Justice Still Denied
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Mass killings, chemical attacks, and erased villages remain unpunished as calls grow for global recognition and accountability. 38 years after the Anfal campaign killed 182,000 Kurds, demands for international recognition and justice intensify as survivors warn of repeating history.
Kurdish Policy Analysis / SULAYMANIYAH, IRAQ — Thirty-eight years after the Anfal campaign, one of the most systematic acts of mass violence in the modern Middle East, the wounds remain open—and justice remains elusive.
Between 1987 and 1988, the regime of Saddam Hussein carried out a coordinated campaign targeting Kurdish civilians across northern Iraq. Entire communities were erased. An estimated 182,000 Kurds were killed or disappeared—not for actions, but for identity.
The campaign combined mass executions, forced displacement, and chemical warfare, including attacks linked to the Halabja chemical attack. Thousands of villages were destroyed, and the demographic structure of Kurdistan was deliberately altered.
Despite the scale, survivors and analysts argue the aftermath has been marked by political inertia rather than accountability.
“Anfal is not just history—it is an ongoing political failure,” Kurdish observers say, pointing to the absence of unified international recognition comparable to other genocides such as the Holocaust or the Armenian Genocide.
A Genocide Without Closure
In genocide studies, experts emphasize that the crime does not end when the killing stops. The post-genocide phase—recognition, justice, reparations, and memory—is often longer and more decisive.
For Anfal, that phase remains incomplete.
Legal accountability has been partial. Memory preservation fragmented. International recognition inconsistent.
Analysts warn this creates what scholars describe as a “double victimization”: survivors not only endure the original atrocity but also the absence of justice that follows.
Memory Without Strategy
Annual commemorations across the Kurdistan Region honor the victims, but critics say they have become ritualized rather than strategic.
“There is remembrance,” one researcher noted, “but not enough transformation of memory into political leverage.”
Key gaps remain:
- Limited global awareness campaigns
- Insufficient academic research translated into international languages
- Weak institutionalization of Anfal as a national identity pillar
In contrast, other genocides have been embedded into global consciousness through education, diplomacy, and cultural production.
The Politics of Recognition
The failure to secure broad international recognition has strategic consequences.
Recognition is not symbolic—it is legal and geopolitical. It shapes reparations, influences foreign policy, and determines whether such crimes are deterred or repeated.
Critics argue that the Kurdistan Regional Government has not fully leveraged diplomatic channels to internationalize the Anfal case.
Without recognition, they warn, Anfal risks remaining a regional tragedy rather than a global legal precedent.
A Warning for the Future
The Anfal campaign is not only a historical crime—it is a warning embedded in the present.
Genocide, scholars stress, is not defined by numbers alone but by intent: the systematic attempt to erase a people.
For many Kurds, the fear is not just that Anfal is forgotten—but that its conditions could re-emerge.
Conclusion
Nearly four decades later, Anfal remains a defining trauma—and an unresolved geopolitical issue.
For survivors, justice is not only about the past. It is about ensuring that the mechanisms of destruction—state violence, impunity, and silence—are never allowed to converge again.
Until then, Anfal is not closed history.
It is unfinished. Never forget, Never Again
#Anfal #Kurdistan #Genocide #NeverForget #Iraq #HumanRights #MiddleEast #JusticeForKurds #Geopolitics
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