Lakestan incident

{{short description|1920s invasion of Azerbaijan}}

{{pp-sock|small=yes}}

{{Infobox military conflict

| conflict = Lakestan incident

| place = Soltan Ahmad and Qarah Qeshlaq, Lakestan, West Azerbaijan province

| partof = Kurdish separatism in Iran, Simko Shikak revolt (1918–1922)

| result = Iranian victory

  • Kurdish fighters initially capture Lakestan, later recaptured by Iranian forces
  • Continued ethnic tensions

| combatant1 = Kurdish rebels
Supported by:
{{flagcountry|Ottoman Empire}}{{Cite book |last=Lazarev |first=Mikhail Semenovich |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pncKAQAAIAAJ |title=Emperyalizm ve Kürt Sorunu (1917-1923) |date=1989 |publisher=Özge |isbn=978-975-7861-00-3 |language=tr}}

| combatant2 = Azerbaijani locals


Assyrian locals
{{flag|Qajar Iran}}

| commander1 = Simko Shikak

| commander2 = {{flagicon|Qajar Iran}} Reza Khan
{{flagicon|Qajar Iran}} Masoud Divan{{KIA}}{{Cite web |title=کتاب تاریخ هیجده ساله آذربایجان اثر احمد کسروی {{!}} ایران کتاب |url=https://www.iranketab.ir/book/4711-eighteen-years-history-of-azerbaijan |access-date=2024-12-10 |website=فروشگاه اینترنتی ایران کتاب |language=fa}}
{{flagicon|Qajar Iran}} Sadegh Khan
{{flagicon|Qajar Iran}} Taymour Yavur Habshi
{{flagicon|Qajar Iran}} Hajireza Qaraqeshlaghi
{{flagicon|Qajar Iran}} Karbalaei Ibrahim Khan
{{flagicon|Qajar Iran}} Qazaljah
{{flagicon|Qajar Iran}} Kazem Khan

| strength1 = Nearly 4,000 Kurds

400–500 Ottoman soldiers (support)

| strength2 = 7,700{{Cite book |last=Farrokh |first=Kaveh |title=Iran at War 1500-1988 |date=December 20, 2011 |publisher=Bloomsbury Publishing |isbn=9781780962405 |location=United Kingdom |page=252 |language=en}}

| casualties1 =

| casualties2 = 3,500 Azerbaijani civilians{{Cite book |last=Azarbarzin |first=Dr Rouzbeh |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=N28WEQAAQBAJ&dq=lakestan+incident&pg=PT86 |title=Reza Shah the Great: The Genius of the Era |date=2024-07-22 |publisher=Xlibris Corporation |isbn=979-8-3694-2539-8 |language=en}}Chaliand, Gérard (1981-01-01). Les Kurdes et le Kurdistan (in French). La Découverte (réédition numérique FeniXX). pp. 50–52. {{ISBN|2707110132}}.

| date = December 1919

}}

The Lakestan incident refers to the failed invasion and massacres led by Simko Shikak in the Lakestan region of West Azerbaijan.

Background

After the end of the World War I, Simko Shikak, who was the head of the Shikak Kurdish tribe, began leading attacks on ethnic Assyrian and Azerbaijani civilians, as well as Iranian authorities, demanding independence for Kurdistan. In 1918, many Kurds west of Lake Urmia pledged allegiance Simko, who began establishing his authority.W. G. Elphinston, The Kurdish Question, International Affairs, Vol.22, No.1, pp. 91-103, 1946. p. 97 Simko rapidly grew his Kurdish army in size and strength. The Iranian army could not stop the Kurds loyal to Simko as they were much stronger, therefore Simko captured much lands in West Azerbaijan province, and by 1922 even large cities including Baneh and Sardasht.F. Koohi-Kamali, "Nationalism in Iranian Kurdistan" in The Kurds: A Contemporary Overview, ed. P.G. Kreyenbroek, and S. Sperl, 252 pp., Routledge, 1992, {{ISBN|0-415-07265-4}} pp. 175, 176

The multi-ethnic parts of West Azerbaijan province, especially the cities of Salmas, Urmia, and Khoy, were dangerous, and there were telegrams of pleas from Azerbaijanis and Assyrians who grew increasingly worried about a possible Kurdish invasion. Later, Simko Shikak announced his planned invasion of Lakestan, namely Soltan Ahmad and Qarah Qeshlaq, both of which were inhabited entirely by ethnic Azerbaijanis.کسروی، احمد، «تاریخ هیجده ساله آذربایجان: بازمانده تاریخ مشروطه ایران»، ص 851. Lakestan is near Salmas, and its residents were either cattle breeders, farmers, or chiefs.انزلی، حسن، «اورمیه در گذر زمان»، ص 234.کسروی، احمد، «تاریخ هیجده ساله آذربایجان: بازمانده تاریخ مشروطه ایران»، صص 829 - 832.

Invasion

During December 1919, Simko prepared forces to attack Lakestan. When the people of Lakestan heard, they prepared for war and gathered from nine villages in two places, Soltan Ahmad and Qara Qeshlaq. They brought their wives and children along with them. There were 8,700 locals, although over 340 did not have weapons. The leaders of the Azerbaijanis were Masoud Divan and his brother Sadegh Khan. Taymour Yavur Habshi and Hajireza Qaraqeshlaghi and Karbalaei Ibrahim Khan Qazaljah were also among the companions of Masoud Divan and the chiefs of Lakestan. Before the battle began, Kazem Khan, an Azerbaijani leader from Qushchi, came to Lakestan with fifty of his fighters.

Simko had nearly 4,000 Kurdish troops. On Friday, 19 December, the invasion began as they reached the vicinity of Soltan Ahmad. The Azerbaijanis resisted for two hours before being overwhelmed by the Kurds, who entered the city from all sides and began looting and killing. Civilians who escaped made it to Qara Qeshlaq, while some were killed before they reached it.کسروی، احمد، «تاریخ هیجده ساله آذربایجان: بازمانده تاریخ مشروطه ایران»، صص 851 - 852. The Iranian government asked Simko to stop the invasion, although Simko continued it when his demand for 5,000 tomans and 15,000 bullets was not met.

After capturing Soltan Ahmad, Simko led the assault on Qara Qeshlaq. Masoud Divan and his brothers Sadiq Khan and Ibrahim Khan led the defense of Qara Qeshlaq and were able to resist for eleven hours. The battle in Qara Qeshlaq was much bloodier than the one in Soltan Ahmad. Masoud Divan was later killed. The Kurds eventually captured Qara Qeshlaq, while residents escaped at night in the desert, and those who stayed in the village were captured. Many of those who escaped died from the cold, while the survivors reached Sharafkhaneh after 2 days.کسروی، احمد، «تاریخ هیجده ساله آذربایجان: بازمانده تاریخ مشروطه ایران»، ص 852.

In the telegram that survivors of Lakestan sent to Tabriz, they claimed that 3,500 Azerbaijanis had died, with 2,000 of them dying during the battles and 1,500 dying due to the cold weather while they were trying to escape. The deaths created a strong shock in Tabriz, where the people criticised the Iranian government. They compared the Lakestan incident to the Uprising of Sheikh Ubeydullah, where Kurdish rebels infiltrated Iran and nearly reached Tabriz, before failing due to the Shia Azerbaijanis refusing to surrender to Sunni Kurds.Behrendt, Günter (1993), pp.222–223Chaliand, Gérard (1981-01-01). Les Kurdes et le Kurdistan (in French). La Découverte (réédition numérique FeniXX). pp. 50–52. {{ISBN|2707110132}}. The Iranian Army later deployed troops to Lakestan and retook it. In nearby settlements, during and after the Lakestan incident, Kurds clashed with Azerbaijanis and Assyrians.کسروی، احمد، «تاریخ هیجده ساله آذربایجان: بازمانده تاریخ مشروطه ایران»، صص 852 - 857. Simko stopped his attacks after reaching an agreement with Iran, although he began attacking once again, and his men returned to looting Azerbaijani and Assyrian villages.تاریخ مشروطه ایران (کتاب), تاریخ مشروطهٔ ایران, احمد کسروی تبریزی, انتشارات امیرکبیر, صفحه ۴۲۵ Immediately after, Simko led an invasion of Urmia, where another battle and more massacres ensued.کسروی، احمد، «تاریخ هیجده ساله آذربایجان: بازمانده تاریخ مشروطه ایران»، ص 831.

References