It was scrapped when Mustafa Kemal Atatürk was able to fight back against the implementation of the Treaty of Sèvres and write the new Treaty of Lausanne which prevented the realization of an independent Kurdistan.
No. The area commonly called "Mesopotamia" is today mostly in Iraq. Kurdistan is in in northern Iraq with portions also in Iran, Syria, and Turkey. While there are parts of Mesopotamia that overlap with areas of Kurdistan, the majority of Mesopotamia is outside of Kurdistan and the majority of Kurdistan is outside of Mesopotamia.
Kurdistan is a region and not a country. It is spread across several countries such as Iran, Iraq, Turkey, and Syria, with a Kurdish population sharing a common heritage. Calls for an independent Kurdish state have been ongoing for decades, but currently, there is no internationally recognized country called Kurdistan.
Kurdistan is a region in the Middle East that spans parts of eastern Turkey, northern Syria, northern Iraq, and western Iran. It is home to the Kurdish people, who have their own distinct language and culture. The boundaries of Kurdistan are not officially recognized as a separate country by the international community.
As a result of the Syrian Civil War, Syrian Kurdistan (also called West Kurdistan) has effectively become independent. It does not officially have a capital, but claims its capital to be al-Qamishli, which is currently under partial Kurdish and partial Assad control.
It used to be the nation state Kurdistan. Now it is the confederacy of Kurdistan. PKK changed their name and goal soon after the arrest of Apo (Abdullah Öcalan). They are commonly known as PKK but their name is KCK Koma Civaken Kurdistan (Union of Communities in Kurdistan) The armed wing of that organisation is called HPG Hezen parastina gel (The peoples defence forces).
There is not a country called Kurdistan... So you can not be a citizen of a country which does not exist... Whatever nationality you are... u will need a visa unless you are a citizen of an EU country or US...!
The majority population of Kurdistan is made of Kurds.
No. The area commonly called "Mesopotamia" is today mostly in Iraq. Kurdistan is in in northern Iraq with portions also in Iran, Syria, and Turkey. While there are parts of Mesopotamia that overlap with areas of Kurdistan, the majority of Mesopotamia is outside of Kurdistan and the majority of Kurdistan is outside of Mesopotamia.
An organization called the PKK is the main supporter of an independent Kurdistan. No single nation on earth has publicly acknowledged to be a supporter of Kurdistan.
No, but there is a country called Kyrgyzstan. It is an independent republic in Central Asia and was formerly an SSR of the Soviet Union. There is also a region called Kurdistan, which is located in the Middle East. It was split between the countries of Turkey, Syria, Iraq, and Iran by the Great Powers so there would not be one Kurdistan nation and would create issues in the Middle East.
Depends on where the person who's asking is. In their original country they'll be called Emigrants and on the foreign country they'll be called Immigrants.
It begin at a place called KURDISTAN it's at north Iraq.
retaliationThis is called retaliation.
retaliationThis is called retaliation.
retaliationThis is called retaliation.
retaliationThis is called retaliation.
As a result of the Syrian Civil War, Syrian Kurdistan (also called West Kurdistan) has effectively become independent. It does not officially have a capital, but claims its capital to be al-Qamishli, which is currently under partial Kurdish and partial Assad control.