Kurdistan Free Life Party
Political party and militant group in Iran / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Kurdistan Free Life Party, or PJAK (Kurdish: Partiya Jiyana Azad a Kurdistanê), is a Kurdish leftist anti-Islamic Republic of Iran armed militant group.[1] It has waged an intermittent armed struggle since 2004 against the Iranian regime, seeking self-determination through some degree of autonomy for Kurds in Iran (also known as "Eastern Kurdistan" or "Rojhelat").[2][3][4]
Kurdistan Free Life Party Partiya Jiyana Azad a Kurdistanê (PJAK) پارتی ژیانی ئازادی کوردستان | |
---|---|
Leader | Zilan Vejin and Siamand Moeini |
Founded | 2004; 20 years ago (2004) |
Armed wing | Eastern Kurdistan Units (YRK) |
Women's armed wing | Women's Defence Forces (HPJ) |
Ideology | Democratic confederalism Kurdish Nationalism |
Political position | Left-wing |
International affiliation | Kurdistan Communities Union (KCK) |
The PJAK is aligned with the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) through the Kurdistan Communities Union, an umbrella group of Kurdish political and insurgent groups in Turkey, Iran, Syria, and Iraq.[5][6][7]
PJAK spokespersons have repeatedly told visiting media that its armed wing, the Eastern Kurdistan Units (YRK), has approximately 3,000 active members - half of them women - however estimates from academic specialists over the years point to more conservative figures such as 1,000.[8] However, PJAK's capabilities to inflict significant damage on Islamic Republic of Iran forces in Kurdish areas of Iran has by some accounts been significantly weakened over the past decade, firstly due to a relatively large-scale 2011 cross-border campaign that killed potentially hundreds of PJAK fighters, secondly to due to recent increased Turkish-Iranian cooperation through sharing intel (satellite, drone footage) on PKK and PJAK movements in their Qandil Mountains bases.[9][10] On the other hand, a recent uptick in Iranian regime repression, imprisonment, executions, and extra-judicial killings of Kurdist activists have allegedly caused an increase in recruits to PJAK and the other clandestine anti-IRI Kurdish rebel groups Komala, KDPI, and PAK.[11][12]
PJAK has been designated as a terrorist organisation by Iran,[13] Turkey,[14] and since 2009, by the United States.[1][15]