Biography
Jamil Abdullah Hassan was born in 1925 in the village of Avedur, Barzan district, Mergasur district, Erbil province They had two daughters, Nadia and Hadiya, both born in 1958. In 1975, after the collapse of the September Revolution, he was transferred to southern Iraq by the Ba'ath regime in Diwaniya province and then in the plains He was disappeared on July 31, 1983 during the Anfal operation against the Barzanis by the Iraqi government in Qushtapa community.
The struggle
On 23 May 1947, he accompanied General Mustafa Barzani He crossed the Aras River on June 18, 1947, which is located on the border between Iran and the Soviet Union
After arriving in the Soviet Union, on June 19, 1947, he and all his comrades were detained in Nakhchevan, Azerbaijan, for forty days in an open community surrounded by barbed wire by a group of soldiers They were guarded and treated like prisoners of war in terms of food, clothing and transportation. They were later divided into Aghdam, Lachin, Ayulakh and Kalbajar regions of Azerbaijan by the decision of the Soviet government. On December 10, 1947, they were transferred to a military base on the Caspian Sea in Baku, the capital of the Republic of Azerbaijan They have been militarized. At the same time, they were taught Kurdish for four hours a day by some of their educated comrades.
After the mistreatment of his comrades, Jafar Bakirov decided to move his military camp from the Republic of Azerbaijan on August 29, 1948 to the community of Chirchuk near Tashkent, the capital of the Republic of Uzbekistan, where they continued military training.
In March 1949, he and his comrades were distributed by train to the villages of the Soviet Union and worked on the farms of the kolkhozes (land that people rented from the government and then paid back to the government).
After much effort and sending several letters by General Barzani to Stalin, Stalin finally received a letter in which Barzani talked about the suffering of his comrades and he immediately decided to form a committee to investigate the situation of Barzani's comrades November 1951 Moves to Vrevisky, Soviet Union.
After the July 14, 1958 revolution in Iraq and the return of the general Mustafa BarzaniOn February 25, 1959, he and his comrades were granted a general amnesty under Articles 3 and 7, paragraph (a) of Article 10 and Article 11 of the 1959 Amended Law.
In 1958, the Iraqi Republic was established under the leadership of Abdul Karim Qasim. On April 16, 1959, he returned to Kurdistan with his comrades on the ship Georgia via the port of Basra in the south of the Iraqi Republic.
In 1975, after the collapse of the September Revolution, he was transferred to Diwaniya province in southern Iraq and later settled in the Erbil plain Qushtapa is missing.
Sources:
- Archive of the Kurdistan Democratic Party Encyclopedia Board
- Hamid Gardi, Summary of History, First Edition, (Erbil - Aras Publishing House - Ministry of Education Printing House - 2004).
- Rekari Mazwiri, Russian Women, Deportation, Anfal and Genocide, 1st Edition, (Erbil – Minara Printing House – 2010).
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- Shaban Ali Shaban, Some Political and Historical Information, Third Edition, (Erbil - Rojhelat Printing House - 2013).
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- Omar Hamza Salih, Genocide and Crimes of the Ba'ath Regime against the Barzanis 1975-1991 from the Language of Witnesses and Documents, 1st Edition, (Erbil - Rojhelat Printing House - 2017).
- Karwan Mohammed Majid, Barzanis from Mahabad to the Soviet Union, 1st edition, (Sulaimani - Paywand Printing House - 2011).
- Hataw Magazine, No. 154, Year 6, Erbil, Kurdistan Printing House, Friday, April 15, 1959.
- In the memoir of the commander of martyr Haso Mirkhan Zhazhoki, 62 days with Barzani, the Barzanis went to the Soviet Union, first edition (Erbil - Roshnbiri Printing House - 1997).
- Laith Abdul Mohsen Jawad al-Zubaidi, Revolution of July 14, 1958 in Iraq, (Baghdad - Dar al-Rashid Publishing House - 1979).
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