Last modified: 2003-01-18 by ivan sache
Keywords: kurdistan | people's liberation army of kurdistan | arteshen rizgariya gelli kurdistan | star (red) |
Links: FOTW homepage |
search |
disclaimer and copyright |
write us |
mirrors
See also:
The triangular pennant with green and yellow stripes and a red star represents the ARGK (Arteshen Rizgariya Gelli Kurdistan, the People's Liberation Army of Kurdistan, under the command of the PKK.
Jacob Zhu, 25 May 1998
The triangular version of the ARGK flag is designed to hang vertically from a pike (like certain medieval and ecclesiastical banners) and carried on parad.The HRK also had this triangular flag, with the letters H-R-K in exactly the same position as on the rectangular flag.
ARGK disbanded earlier in 2000 after the 7th PKK Congress. The flag of the organisation will presumably no longer be seen in public, except as an historic artifact.
T. F. Mills, 27 February 1999 & 10 July 2000
The triangular flag of the ARGK was also occasionally seen in a more conventional rectangular form. This conventional rectangular flag was meant to be flown from stationary flag poles. I can't imagine there were many places in Turkey where this couldbe safely done, and Syria recently shut down ARGK bases on its territory.
T. F. Mills, 27 September 1997 & 27 February 1999
I have a photograph of a demonstration of Kurds, probably somewhere in Central Europe. In this picture, there are a lot of flags, being all but one flags of the ERNK (Red flag with red star within a yellow circle surrounded by a green disk). The remaining flag is unknown to me. It is hardly seen on the background but, using a magnifying lens, I was able to make an aproximate reconstruction: it is a rectangular flag, divided yellow over green in proportions aproximately 4:1, and with a large red fivepointed star centered in the intersection of the two stripes and shifted towards the hoist. The resulting image is quite weird to my eyes, so I'm not 100% sure of it.
Jorge Candeias, 4 April 19