
Three dead in natural park blaze in Iran's Kurdistan province: Watchdog
Iran executes over 100 Kurds in 2025 amid post-war crackdown: Watchdog
Tensions rise in Iranian parliament ahead of IAEA visit
At least five killed in attack on Iran courthouse
Iranian diplomat says had 'frank' talks with European powers
A+ A-
ERBIL, Kurdistan Region - Three environmental activists lost their lives and several others were injured while attempting to extinguish a wildfire that broke out in a popular natural park in western Iran's (Rojhelat) Kurdistan province, a human rights watchdog said on Monday.
A blaze at Kurdistan's Abidar Natural Park, among the most well-known areas in the province, broke out on Thursday and quickly spread to residential complexes nearby. The fire was eventually brought under control by local residents and environmental activists, who criticized the government for insufficient support.
The Oslo-based Hengaw Human Rights Organization said that environmental activists Khabat Amini, Chaiko Yousefinejad, and Hamid Moradi died due to 'severe burns' sustained from the fire.
Five other environmental activists were injured, according to Hengaw.
Footage dated Monday showed a large crowd gathering before a local hospital in Kurdistan's provincial capital of Sanandaj to honor their dedication, Hengaw added, and their funerals drew a large crowd.
A two-day mourning period was declared in Sanandaj by Governor Arash Lihony after their deaths.
The Abidar Natural Park in Kurdistan province is renowned for its scenic beauty and its open-air cinema, considered one of the largest of its kind in the Middle East, making it a popular tourist destination and outdoor recreation area for residents.
Forest fires in Rojhelat, particularly in the vicinity of Kurdistan province, have become increasingly regular over the past few years, sparking concerns from environmentalists amid claims of arson. Many hold the Iranian government responsible for the blazes.
Iranian security forces also routinely arrest environmentalists seeking to control the flames.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Rudaw Net
4 hours ago
- Rudaw Net
Trump tells Rudaw Iran has been acting 'very badly'
Also in World Russia reiterates support for Kurds to be 'integral' part of Syria Kurdish lawyer urges legal consultation as Germany steps up deportations Activists urge equal rights for Syria's minorities US congressman seeks to block Iraq funding over 'terrorist militias' attacks A+ A- WASHINGTON DC - US President Donald Trump told Rudaw on Thursday that Iran has been acting 'very badly' and not speaking nicely, when asked whether Washington and Tehran might resume nuclear talks. 'Iran has been acting very badly. They were decimated. Their nuclear capability - which could have happened within three or four weeks - was decimated. It's been obliterated. The Atomic Energy Commission said the place is just decimated,' Trump told Rudaw during a press briefing. US strikes hit Iran's three main nuclear sites last month. Trump has repeatedly said that the attacks 'obliterated' the sites but Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has claimed that Trump has exaggerated the destruction. Washington on June 24 brokered a ceasefire to the 12-day war between Israel and Iran. Iran and the US had held five rounds of Oman-mediated indirect nuclear talks before Israel attacked the Islamic republic, which effectively ended the negotiations, especially after Trump joined in striking Iran. 'Now, they can start again, but they'd have to start on different sites because they were hit. I tell you what, the job these pilots did with their B-2 bombers - those unbelievable machines - they traveled 36 hours without stop, and they hit every single target... we shot 30 rockets from submarines that were hundreds of miles away, and they hit every target.' added the US president. 'So they can start again, but they haven't been saying the right thing. I will say, Iran has not been saying the right thing. They have not been speaking nicely, and they should be,' he noted. Under a 2015 nuclear deal with world powers - formally known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) - Iran agreed to curb its nuclear enrichment program in exchange for much-needed relief from crippling sanctions. Iranian foreign minister said earlier this month that 'maybe the current administration doesn't like that, but we can come to a similar deal, a better deal than that.'


Shafaq News
5 hours ago
- Shafaq News
Public opinion is absent from the Anfal crimes anniversary
Shafaq News Although the memory of Iraqis is burdened with disasters and bloody tragedies, they rarely express them with collective awareness or in public. Bitter experiences have taught them that reviving such memories could be exploited politically by certain parties. Every year, the anniversary of the Anfal campaigns launched by Saddam Hussein's regime against the Kurds passes without genuine engagement from Iraqi public opinion. The reason lies not in a weak collective memory but in official policies that have deliberately employed these occasions while ignoring their national and humanitarian dimensions. Successive governments, along with their media apparatuses, have adopted a political discourse stripped of moral content, causing confusion and apathy among the people. This performance has weakened trust and deepened divisions to the point that mourning for an Anfal child has become rare, and some have even gone as far as justifying the crime or praising the perpetrator. Had media policies over the past two decades been more professional and just, Iraqis of all backgrounds would today be at the forefront of those crying out against the Anfal crimes and other massacres. But the selective narrative and political exploitation have obscured the story, disappointed the public, and embarrassed state institutions. More than four decades have passed since the massacres committed by the Ba'ath regime against Kurdish villages and towns under the banner of "Anfal." Yet official stances remain lackluster, and society lacks a true moral compass. Although the Supreme Criminal Court recognized the Anfal as a crime of genocide, that recognition failed to build a firm societal awareness or prevent similar future catastrophes. Even the global public only came to grasp the gravity of what occurred much later—because we failed to tell the truth in its proper time. Sociologists understand that neglecting such memories or approaching them coldly weakens the collective conscience and causes dangerous moral dysfunction in society. True commemoration of these events does not come through official statements but through reviving awareness and involving generations in understanding what happened and why it happened. What is lost today is not merely a historical event, but a precious moral and human capital. The moral exhaustion has reached a point where society can no longer bear to look at images of the victims or comprehend the horror of the crime. This poses a serious threat to the identity and social fabric of the country. Perhaps the deliberate neglect of the anniversary of the Barzani Anfal this year is a glaring example of this absence. There are no sufficient justifications for erasing this tragedy from public awareness, because the collective memory only thrives when citizens feel that it concerns them—that it lies at the heart of their cause. Commemorating this anniversary does not mean inflating the number of victims, but pausing to understand how the Kurds reached that moment in history, and what must change to ensure it does not happen again. The loss of social trust capital has worsened today, and officials must recognize the value of these occasions as gateways to restoring national unity. The Anfal is not merely a Kurdish tragedy—it is an Iraqi catastrophe par excellence. It deserves to be embraced by all components of the Iraqi people, not as a sad memory, but as a cry of conscience against tyranny, whose echo should be heard in Basra, Al-Anbar, Nineveh, and every corner of this land—a roadmap toward a future where justice is never forgotten.


Rudaw Net
5 hours ago
- Rudaw Net
Russia reiterates support for Kurds to be ‘integral' part of Syria
Also in World Kurdish lawyer urges legal consultation as Germany steps up deportations Activists urge equal rights for Syria's minorities US congressman seeks to block Iraq funding over 'terrorist militias' attacks French FM speaks with SDF chief, expresses support for Syrian Kurds A+ A- ERBIL, Kurdistan Region - Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said on Thursday that his country wants Kurds to remain an "integral" part of Syria, calling for inclusive elections in Syria. 'Naturally, we are interested in these elections being inclusive and in all ethnic and religious groups having the opportunity to take part in forming new legislative bodies," Lavrov said during a joint press conference with his Syrian counterpart Assad al-Shaibani in Moscow, reported Russia's state-run TASS. He added that the two discussed the Syrian interim government's relations with Syrian Kurds. "We are interested in the Kurds remaining integral members of Syrian society within the framework of the single state," the Russian foreign minister noted. Russia, main backer of the ousted regime of Bashar al-Assad, used to play the role of a mediator between Assad and the Kurdish administration in northeast Syria (Rojava). Syria's interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa and the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) chief Mazloum Abdi signed an agreement on March 10 to integrate all civil and military institutions in Rojava - including the SDF - under the authority of the Syrian state. The US and France unsuccessfully tried to convene both sides in Paris earlier this month. In an exclusive interview with Rudaw, Qutaiba Idlbi, director of American affairs at Syria's foreign ministry, stated on Wednesday that Damascus and the SDF will meet in Paris 'soon.'