Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

The stolen sanjaq: the Iskenderun dispute

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • The stolen sanjaq: the Iskenderun dispute

    Al-Ahram Weekly, Egypt
    July 14-20, 2005

    The stolen sanjaq

    The Iskenderun dispute was assiduously covered by Al-Ahram in the
    critical juncture between 1936-1937 when the question was put before
    the League of Nations. The league's resolutions, writes Professor
    Yunan Labib Rizk, marked a turning point in the life of the province
    that had once been part of Syria

    The purpose of this Chronicle is not to dig up old quarrels with our
    Arab neighbours which, in all events were more the product of
    colonial interests than they were of Egypt's bilateral relations with
    those countries. Rather our task, as we comb through old editions of
    Al-Ahram, is to offer a unique and unconventional portrait of those
    issues, one that conveys an immediacy rarely found in academic
    studies on the subject.

    Before proceeding to the topic at hand, it is important to register
    several observations on what was referred to 70 years ago as the
    "question of the sanjaq of Iskenderun". Under Ottoman rule, a
    "sanjaq" was an administrative subdivision of "vilayet", of which
    Greater Syria had been one.

    The question itself was related to arrangements European powers
    concluded among themselves in the wake of WWI. With the collapse of
    the Ottoman Empire and the creation of the League of Nations, France
    and Britain moved to legitimise their possessions in the Middle East.
    The instrument they created for this purpose was the so-called
    mandate, conferred upon them by the newly created international
    organisation over which they exercised disproportionate control, and
    which enabled them to redraw the map of the region in a manner that
    better enabled them to impose their hegemony. Accordingly, Lebanon
    was severed from Greater Syria; Jordan was carved out as a newly
    created state and the former Ottoman district of Jerusalem and
    province of Acre were transformed into Palestine.

    Of greater relevance to the Iskenderun question was rival claims over
    certain ethnically mixed parts of the Levant. In Iraq, for example,
    there arose disputes with both Turkey and Iran. The former laid claim
    to Mosul and the surrounding area on the grounds of its predominantly
    Turkish population. Britain disputed that claim, determined as it was
    to retain that area for Iraq over which it had mandate authority. The
    reverse occurred in the tug-of-war between Iraq and Iran over
    Arabistan. In this case, Iraq lost this erstwhile Ottoman province to
    Tehran, which renamed it Khozastan. Another heavily ethnically mixed
    region was the northern Syrian sanjaq of Iskenderun, formerly called
    Iskenderun, which France in this case handed over to Ankara.

    Needless to say, the prime determinant in these situations was the
    interests of the mandate powers. London was not about to cede the oil
    rich area of Mosul to Turkey under any circumstances, whereas it had
    nothing to lose by striking a deal with Tehran over Arabistan.
    Different dynamics affected the fate of Iskenderun. For one, in order
    to strengthen its position in the eastern Mediterranean, France was
    eager to improve its relations with countries in the region, Turkey,
    obviously, being a key state. Simultaneously, unlike the case with
    the British- Turkish dispute over Mosul, there was no economic factor
    such as oil to compel France to hold on to Iskenderun, unlike the
    case with Mosul. Secondly, although the Turkish minority in Mosul was
    relatively small and only one of several other minority communities,
    in Iskenderun the Turks were virtually equal in number to the Arabs
    and far outnumbered the Armenians, the only other minority of
    significant size. At the same time, for historical reasons the Turks
    were by far the most influential minority community: they formed the
    majority of major landlords whereas the Arabs made up the masses of
    the peasant class. It followed that the Turks were generally more
    educated and hence had greater access to key political, economic and
    social positions.

    The rival claims on the sanjaq had their roots in French policy in
    Syria and in the Treaty of Ankara. As a mandate power, France was now
    in a position to reorder the administration of its Levant
    possessions. Its first step was to declare Syria and Lebanon separate
    countries. Syria itself was divided into four administrative
    departments: Aleppo, Damascus, Alawin and Jabal Druze, and
    Iskenderun, to which it accorded a special status. The other half of
    the equation was the Ankara Treaty, also known as the
    Franklin-Bouillon accord, concluded between Ankara and Paris on 21
    October 1921, which officially ended the state of war between the two
    countries. Article 7 of this treaty granted special privileges to the
    Turkish inhabitants of Iskenderun, stating, "A special administrative
    system shall be created for the region of Iskenderun. The Turkish
    inhabitants of this region shall be accorded every facility for
    developing their culture and the Turkish language shall have official
    status."

    French mandate policy was instrumental in paving the way for the
    severing off of the province. Firstly, the high commissioner decreed
    that all laws that were observed in Aleppo would also apply to
    Iskenderun and that the province would have representatives in the
    Aleppo national assembly. At the same time, the sanjaq would have its
    own governor who would administer the province autonomously alongside
    the high commissioner and it would have its own budget. Later, after
    it was decided to incorporate Aleppo into a unified Syrian
    government, the French mandate authorities decided to uphold
    Iskenderun's special status, thereby preserving its financial and
    administrative autonomy and retaining Turkish as an official language
    alongside Arabic.

    Iskenderun's autonomy thus reconfirmed, the stage was now set for
    separation. Following the parliamentary elections held in early 1936,
    the sanjaq's representatives petitioned the French high commissioner
    to render their province totally independent from Syria and
    subordinate it to the French directly. That French officials in Syria
    clearly favoured the Turkish over the Arab partisans in the province
    was taken as a sign that their wish would be granted and that this
    would prelude the eventual handover of the province to Turkey.

    The Iskenderun question became more acute following the conclusion of
    the Franco-Syrian Treaty in 1936. The treaty officially ended the
    French mandate over Syria, although France retained certain
    privileges with regard to the conduct of Syrian foreign policy. In
    addition, the treaty stipulated that the department of Alawin and
    Jabal Druze would retain administrative and financial autonomy and
    that the Syrian government must respect the rights of all minority
    communities. Such provisions encouraged the Turks in Iskenderun to
    create the "Hatay Independence Society" which the Arabs countered by
    creating the National Action League to promote the assimilation of
    the province into Syria. In addition, as tension increased between
    the two communities over the future of the province, a wave of ethnic
    strife erupted, resulting in numerous casualties.

    After a brief flurry of communications between Paris and Ankara, the
    former insisted that as the mandate power over Syria it did not have
    the right to independently dispose of any portion of Syrian territory
    entrusted to it by the League of Nations. Ankara, naturally, took
    issue. On 28 November, addressing a packed National Assembly, some of
    whose members were so rowdy, according to Al-Ahram, that they shouted
    out remarks intentionally offensive to France, the Turkish foreign
    minister proclaimed that the Turkish people were prepared "to dye the
    ink needed to settle the question with red!"

    In order to help its readers understand the issue, the London Times
    provided a brief background study of the territory under dispute. The
    Turks began to settle in Iskenderun following the end of the
    Crusades, it wrote. "Following the Great War, some of them began to
    refer to themselves as Turkmen, meaning descendants from the Turkish
    migrants to the area. Undoubtedly, all those people regarded
    themselves as Turks, not Arabs, even though many of them speak Arabic
    as a second language." According to the famous British newspaper,
    while the Turkish community was larger than the other minorities, it
    was doubtful that it constituted the absolute majority of the
    population.

    Al-Ahram too was keen to supply its readers with an analysis of the
    problem. It focussed in particular on the position of the French who
    it regarded as overly protective of their friendship with Turkey,
    whereas it was in their vital interests not to alienate the Syrians.
    Moreover, "the covenant of the League of Nations and the provisions
    of the mandate compel France to safeguard Syria which has been placed
    in its trust. This places France in a very delicate position." On the
    other hand, the newspaper did not believe that turning the matter
    over to the League of Nations assembly would produce a solution as
    rapidly as the Turks would like. "The assembly would have to appoint
    an impartial committee to consider the arguments of the rival
    parties. Then it would have to hold a public referendum if the
    situation called for one. All this would take an inordinate amount of
    time, which would be contrary to the wishes expressed by Turkish
    leaders."

    The newspaper was correct in its assessment of the potential
    explosive nature of the Iskenderun question, which was precisely what
    French officials in Damascus feared. On 6 December 1936, students
    took to the streets in Damascus with the chant, "Long live
    Iskenderun! Iskenderun belongs to Arab Syria!" The organisers of the
    demonstration also dispatched a telegram to the secretary of the
    League of Nations declaring, "Iskenderun is Arab and cannot be
    separated from Syria."

    Syrian political leaders had little choice but to take up the call of
    the street. According to an Al-Ahram news item, the "National Bloc"
    moved to form a Syrian delegation that would be ready to travel to
    Geneva, if necessary, in order to defend the Syrian position. The
    most prominent member of the delegation was Faris Al-Khouri who had
    recently produced a lengthy article, published in the Syrian press,
    on the Syrian position, "substantiated by legal arguments and
    incontrovertible proof that Iskenderun is a purely Syrian territory".


    It was not long before the Syrian delegation would have to act. On
    the very day that a Turkish delegation, headed by the minister of
    foreign affairs, left for Geneva the Syrian delegation boarded a
    private airplane that took them from Tripoli to Marseilles, from
    where they proceeded to Geneva over land. "The delegation carried
    with it all the documentation necessary to support the Syrian point
    of view, which had been laid out in two scrupulously prepared
    memoranda."

    On the morning of 16 December 1936, the League of Nations assembly
    convened expressly to consider the Iskenderun question. The meeting
    opened with a speech by the French delegate who said that in spite of
    the close friendship between his country and Turkey, France was
    obliged to defend the interests of a people entrusted to its care by
    the League of Nations, to lead that people towards independence and
    to safeguard the territorial integrity of their country. He went on
    to express his surprise at the fact that at no point during the
    previous 15 years had Ankara or the inhabitants of Iskenderun raised
    objection to that district's existence within the boundaries of
    Syria. He concluded his speech with a warning against the
    consequences of acceding to the Turkish demand. To do so would
    trigger unrest that could easily spread to other parts of the Arab
    world "in view of the solidarity among the Arab peoples".

    Before the end of that day the French and Turkish delegations had
    reached what Al-Ahram described as a temporary agreement. Three
    observers would be sent to the sanjaq to assess the situation;
    however, the French delegate insisted, this would not alter the
    substance of the issue. He took the occasion to reiterate his caution
    against responding to the Turkish demand, which the Arab world would
    undoubtedly interpret as a bid to dismember Syria, which had only
    just been granted independence.

    Turkish opinion, as aired by the Turkish press, was mistrustful of
    the "temporary agreement". The general opinion was that Iskenderun
    should be granted independence, as Lebanon had been, and linked
    directly to France through a form of alliance. Nevertheless, Ankara
    did nothing to prevent the agreement from being put into effect, and
    three individuals, from Sweden, Holland and Switzerland, were
    appointed as observers.

    Soon afterwards a Turkish delegation arrived in Paris to press for
    one of two solutions: either for France to declare Iskenderun an
    independent republic within the larger Republic of Syria or to grant
    the sanjaq full independence under a Franco-Turkish treaty. France
    was inclined to neither alternative, which led to the rupture of
    diplomatic relations between the two countries.

    With the arrival of the international observer team to Iskenderun,
    tension rose both within the sanjaq and abroad. On 5 January, while
    the observers were in a meeting with various local officials, about
    200 Turkish youths held a rally calling for the sanjaq's
    independence. More than 1,500 Syrian Arabs staged a counter
    demonstration that marched to the premises where the observers were
    meeting, where student leaders delivered impassioned speeches in
    defence of Syria's right to the sanjaq. To aggravate the situation
    further, two days later Turkish President Kemal Ataturk arrived in
    Konya just across the border from Iskenderun in Turkey. In spite of
    the bitter cold -- the temperature recorded that day was 7 degrees
    below zero -- "most of the people of Konya flocked to the train
    station to greet the dictator", as Al-Ahram reported. In the opinion
    of the newspaper, this demonstration constituted further testimony to
    Turkey's determination to press its claim to the Syrian sanjaq.

    In response to Ataturk's visit to Konya, some 3,000 Arab students in
    Iskenderun staged a peaceful demonstration. Sporting Syrian banners
    and chanting the Syrian national anthem, the demonstrators marched
    several times around the government building. Al-Ahram took the
    occasion to inform its readers that the Turkish inhabitants made up
    two-fifths of the sanjaq's population and that they could be roughly
    divided into three factions: secularist Kemalists who demanded the
    sanjaq's independence, traditionalists who were keen to protect Islam
    and Islamic values and, in between, a large group of petty merchants
    who remained silent for fear of incurring the wrath of the Kemalists.
    The three groups could be identified by their preferred headgear. The
    Kemalists sported the Western fedora, the Muslims the tarboush and
    the merchants the beret.

    In the face of the spiralling Iskenderun crisis, it was decided to
    bring the question before the League of Nations. In addition, France
    and Turkey resumed diplomatic contacts in the hope of reaching an
    acceptable solution. This development, in turn, gave rise to
    speculation that the French, in their eagerness to placate the Turks,
    would not only offer guarantees to protect the rights of Turks living
    in Iskenderun but would also grant Ankara certain privileges within
    the province.

    In Geneva, shortly before the League of Nations assembly was due to
    convene, the Franco-Turkish negotiations had reached an impasse,
    requiring British intervention. As Anthony Eden arrived in the Swiss
    capital, the London Times revealed that although the French were
    willing to offer a high degree of autonomy to the Syrian sanjaq, the
    Turks were not satisfied. They remained adamant upon their demand
    that the sanjaq should be accorded full independence within a federal
    framework between Syria, Iskenderun and Lebanon, in accordance with
    which each of these entities would have equal voting rights, even on
    foreign policy matters.

    As advocates of Arab national rights fretted over the potential fate
    of the Syrian province, Al-Ahram featured an article that made it
    appear as if their worst fears were destined to come true. On 24
    January the newspaper's banner headline read: "The Iskenderun crisis
    shrouded in mystery. Al-Ahram 's Geneva correspondent unveils the
    secrets. The time has come to reveal the confidential documents."

    The Al-Ahram correspondent confesses to having been in possession of
    these secret documents for some time. However, "as Al-Ahram gave the
    interests of peace priority over all other considerations, I agreed
    not to release them as long as others did likewise. Yet, today, I
    have learned that the newspapers in Ankara have published these
    secret documents, which now obliges me to do the same."

    The first document was a correspondence from the Turkish ambassador
    in Paris to the French government proposing that Syria, Lebanon and
    Iskenderun become three federated states. Each of these states would
    have full sovereignty except on matters of joint concern, notably
    foreign policy affairs. In addition, the budgetary allocations for
    the conduct of these joint matters would be distributed to the three
    states on the basis of the relative sizes of their populations.

    The second document was the French response to the Turkish proposal.
    Although it was rather ambiguously worded, the communication
    essentially expressed France's willingness to satisfy Ankara's
    demands with regard to the administrative organisation of the
    province, Turkish cultural expression, the disarmament of the
    province and Turkish access to the port of Iskenderun. In the opinion
    of the French official who wrote the letter, "the only questions that
    remain to be solved are the appointment of the governor, a matter in
    which I believe that the League of Nation's Mandate Committee should
    have a say, and the question of the sanjaq's representation in the
    Syrian parliament. The League of Nations assembly will not be
    incapable of reaching a solution to these two matters."

    The ground had been laid for an agreement which soon followed. In the
    opinion of Al-Ahram, the most important feature of the agreement was
    that it was backed by the League of Nations, which hoped to appoint a
    high commissioner to implement it. The agreement itself provided that
    Iskenderun would be demilitarised and that a joint Franco-Turkish
    military commission would be created to defend the province from
    foreign aggression. Iskenderun would be granted wide-ranging
    autonomous powers, rendering it just short of full independence,
    although this was contingent upon the institution of ample guarantees
    for the protection of the Arab and Armenian communities and other
    minorities. Finally, the central Syrian government would have
    ultimate say on foreign policy affairs and a limited number of
    financial matters.

    Relaying information he obtained from the British press, the Al-Ahram
    correspondent in London reports that the two sides reached this
    agreement only after heated debate and that it was largely due to the
    efforts of Mr Eden that the Turks finally relinquished their demand
    for a federal system between Syria, Lebanon and Iskenderun. The
    correspondent goes on to relate, "The French were eager to satisfy
    the Turkish desire to reach an agreement to protect the sanjaq. It
    was around this point that the various demands revolved until an
    agreement came within reach. In the opinion of the Times
    correspondent, among the factors that were most instrumental in
    making this agreement possible were France's position at the head of
    a large Islamic power in North Africa and Ankara's fears of a unified
    Arab stance against Turkey."

    The interlude between 24 January 1937 when Turkey and France reached
    this agreement in principle, and 29 May 1937 when the Iskenderun
    question was ultimately resolved by the League of Nations, was far
    from a period of calm for any of the parties concerned. Upon hearing
    the news of the agreement, students in Damascus went on strike and
    joined the mass demonstration organised by the Committee for the
    Defence of Iskenderun, headed by Fakhri Al-Baroudi. Al-Ahram relates
    that following prayers in the Umayyad Mosque, some 20,000 protesters
    assembled and proceeded to march through the streets of the Syrian
    capital carrying Arab nationalist banners and chanting slogans in
    defence of the Arab character of Iskenderun. "The protesters were led
    by several thousand students marching in perfect order, while people
    gathered in the streets and on their balconies to shout encouragement
    to this patriotic display."

    Taking up the popular appeal, Syrian Prime Minister Jamil Mardam sped
    to Geneva to attend the League of Nations meeting on the
    administrative arrangements for Iskenderun. Meanwhile, the Syrian
    government also decided if the situation demanded it, it would summon
    the parliament to an extraordinary session to review the
    Franco-Syrian Treaty.

    In the meantime, technical experts from the French and Turkish
    negotiating teams in Geneva haggled over a few remaining differences.
    Among these were the women of Iskenderun's right to suffrage, to
    which the French were opposed, as they were to the Turkish proposal
    to conduct a new census before the forthcoming elections -- the
    results of the census the French had recently conducted in the sanjaq
    were still valid, they claimed. Another bone of contention was the
    conduct of the sanjaq's foreign relations. Although Turkey objected
    strenuously at first, it was finally agreed that all the sanjaq's
    foreign relations would continue to pass through Damascus. In
    addition, Iskenderun citizens would have to obtain their passports
    from the Syrian government and foreign consuls wishing to open
    offices in the sanjaq would have to obtain approval from Damascus.

    On 29 May 1927 the League of Nations officially approved all the
    points of the Franco-Turkish agreement, adding only that it would
    send a five-member delegation to Iskenderun in order to make
    arrangements for the elections of the sanjaq's representatives to the
    Syrian parliaments and to ensure the effective monitoring of these
    elections.

    The Arab response to the League of Nations decision was violent. In
    Iskenderun, Arab and Armenian demonstrators took to the streets
    shouting, "Syria, you are my country!" Pro- Syrian and pro-Arab
    banners fluttered at the head of the processions in which female Arab
    students also figured prominently. In addition, clashes erupted
    between the two sides, leading to 29 casualties, of whom five were
    Turks, 12 Arabs, one Armenian, eight Roman Orthodox and three Alawis.

    Meanwhile, in Damascus, the Syrian parliament convened in emergency
    session. With all the representatives from Iskenderun present, it
    unanimously declared its commitment to the Syrian constitution, which
    stated that Syria is an indivisible political entity, and to the
    Franco-Syrian Treaty in accordance with which France was obliged to
    defend the territorial integrity of Syria, of which Iskenderun was an
    integral part.

    The Syrian actions could not avert the inevitable. As Ankara
    encouraged the Turkish inhabitants of Iskenderun to express their
    desire to be annexed to their "motherland", Franco- Turkish
    negotiations continued, with the result that on 4 July 1938 it was
    agreed to allow Turkish forces into Iskenderun. With this came the
    declaration of the independent Republic of Hatay, which, in turn,
    proved preliminary to the final step. On 23 June 1923 the two sides
    struck an agreement in accordance with which Iskenderun was annexed
    to Turkey, after which it became known in Arab nationalist circles as
    the stolen sanjaq.

    http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2005/751/chrncls.htm
Working...
X