Fighting between IRGC and Kurdish Forces Results in More Deaths of Iran’s Border Couriersدر پنج روز نخست شهریور یک کولبر کشته و پنج تن مجروح شدند
AUGUST
31, 2018
At least one courier has been
killed and five other people injured near Iran’s border with Iraq since August
23, 2018, the Center for Human Rights in Iran (CHRI) has learned.
News of the casualties comes
almost a year after Iran promised to implement reforms aimed at protecting the
human rights of the cross-border couriers or “kulbars” in Farsi.
Thousands of kulbars in the
economically depressed Kurdish-populated border regions of northwestern Iran
make meager livings by transporting goods on their backs on foot, or on horses
and mules, mainly between Iran and Iraq. The men, who do not have work permits,
are often shot at by Iranian border guards when they try to avoid customs check
points.
Recently, many of the men, who
are not legally authorized to work as kulbars, have been forced to traverse
routes littered with landmines to avoid being shot at by Iranian border guards
who have come under increasing attacks from Kurdish militants.
“Clashes between Kurdish groups
and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps [IRGC] have become more frequent and
as a result, many of the traditional foot paths have been closed,” a source in
Iran’s Kurdistan Province told CHRI. “The remaining paths are full of mines and
more difficult to traverse.”
The source spoke on condition
of anonymity because Iranian authorities have prosecuted people for speaking to
foreign media outlets about human rights issues.
“On August 23, one kulbar was
wounded by a direct gunshot and the following day at least four kulbars stepped
on a mine in Marivan [city in Kurdistan Province], killing one of them,” added
the source.
The incident resulted in the
death of one kulbar and three others were wounded, according to the state-funded Iranian
Labor News Agency (ILNA)
On August 27, the Center of
Democracy and Human Rights in Kurdistan (CDHRK), an advocacy group based in
Iran, released the names of six
casualties since August 23: the death of Nasser Banouj and wounding of
“Mansour, the son of Majid,” “Eghbal, the son of Ahmad” and “Ebrahim, the son
of Mohammad” from the mine explosion, in addition to the wounding of Osman
Ghadimi and Ayoub Nikzad from bullets fired by border guards.
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