First Inspectorate-General (Turkey) Explained

First Inspectorate-General
Official Name:Birinci Umumi Müfettişlik
Established Title:Establishment
Established Date:1 January 1928
Settlement Type:Inspectorate-General
Leader Title:Inspector-Generals
Leader Name:İbrahim Tali Öngören
Hilmi Ergenli
Abidin Özmen
Subdivision Type:Country
Seat:Diyarbakır
Extinct Date:1952
Extinct Title:Disestablishment
Subdivision Type1:Provinces
Subdivision Name:Turkey
Subdivision Name1:Mardin
Siirt
Hakkâri
Elazığ
Bitlis
Şanlıurfa
Van
Ağrı
Şırnak

The First Inspectorate-General refers to a former regional administrative area in Turkey. The First Inspectorate-General span over the provinces Hakkâri, Siirt, Şırnak, Mardin, Şanlıurfa, Bitlis, Elazığ and Van.

Background

After the suppression of the Sheikh Said revolt in spring 1925, Kemal Atatürk established the Reform Council for the East [1] which prepared the Report for Reform in the East which encouraged the creation of Inspectorates-Generals (UMs) in the areas comprising a majority Kurdish population.

History

The First Inspectorate-General was created on the 1 January 1928 and based on the Law 1164, passed in June 1927.[2] The headquarters of the Inspectorate General was to be in the city of Diyarbakır[3] and İbrahim Tali Öngören was appointed its Inspector-General. He had extended authority over military, juridical and civilian matters. An infrastructure program including railways, schools, and a land reform was elaborated for the region. As a result of the land reform, the possessions of the Kurdish elite were divided and a British traveler noted in 1930 that there was no wealthy Kurd left in the region. An efficient turkification policy was carried out in the Inspectorate General, meant to teach the Kurds of their alleged Turkish heritage. The assimilation policy was perceived such a success, that in an attempt to curb the Ararat rebellion, the province of Ağrı (then named Karaköse province) was included in the Inspectorate General. In 1930, the Turkish Foreign minister Tevfik Rüştü Aras, outlined the Turkish approach regarding the Kurds in Geneva, which included a military occupation of the regions in question and a disarmament of the population. In April 1932, a new Five-Year plan for Security and Disarmament was announced in which the soldiers of the Seventh Corps of the Turkish Army were to be involved in the expected battles. Tali Öngören ordered the deportation of several hundred Kurds to the west of Turkey and by the end of the year, he reported thousands of weapons confiscated in the campaign. The Ministry of the Interior reported that by September the Districts of Siverek, Derik and Viranşehir were disarmed. Şükrü Kaya, the Minister of the Interior at the time, elaborated detailed reports about the weapons confiscated to Prime Minister Ismet Inönü. In January 1933 Öngören resigned from the post as Inspector-General[4] and was succeeded by Hilmi Ergeneli who served until 1935. During Ergenelis term as Inspector General, a Resettlement Law was enacted in 1934 which provided the guidelines where Turks and Kurds were to be allowed to settle and enabled the Kemalists to turkefy the rebellious regions. People of Turkish heritage, specially those of Turkish race, were encouraged to live along the rail tracks and the paved roads in the province Diyarbakır. Anyone who was classified as related to the Kurdish tribal leaders by the Inspector Generals office, was to be deported from Diyarbakir. Abidin Özmen succeeded Ergeneli, and attended the conference of all the Governors of the Inspectorates-General with the Minister of the Interior Şükrü Kaya in December 1936 in Ankara. In 1937 the Turks still faced some resistance by Kurdish rebels and once a group around Mehmed Cemilpasazade attacked and killed a state prosecutor from Diyarbakir in the countryside.[5] This caused a furious response by Kaya, and the Chief of Staff Fevzi Çakmak ordered a closer collaboration between the Turkish Army and the Inspectorate General was agreed upon. Özmen served until 1943.[6] The idea of governing the region within Inspectorate-Generals was left behind in 1948, but the First Inspectorate-Generals legal status was only abolished in 1952, during the Government of the Democrat Party.

References

  1. Book: Ronald Grigor Suny. A Question of Genocide: Armenians and Turks at the End of the Ottoman Empire. Fatma Müge Göçek. Norman M. Naimark. 2011-02-23. Oxford University Press. USA. 978-0-19-539374-3. en.
  2. Üçüncü Umumi Müfettişliği'nin Kurulması ve III. Umumî Müfettiş Tahsin Uzer'in Bazı Önemli Faaliyetleri. Aydoğan. Erdal. 2004.
  3. Cagaptay (2006), p.23
  4. Book: Koçak, Cemil. Umumi müfettişlikler: (1927-1952). İletişim. 2003. 978-975-05-0129-6. 83. tr.
  5. Üngör. Uğur Ümit. Uğur Ümit Üngör. 2012. Rethinking the Violence of Pacification: State Formation and Bandits in Turkey, 1914–1937. Comparative Studies in Society and History. 54. 4. 764–765. 10.1017/S0010417512000400 . 23274550 . 147038615 . 0010-4175.
  6. Web site: Zeynel Abidin Özmen. Yasam Öküşü. 27 April 2020. 19 January 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20120119111208/http://www.yasamoykusu.com/biyografi-3199-Zeynel_Abidin_Ozmen. dead.

Literature

. Uğur Ümit Üngör. The making of modern Turkey : nation and state in Eastern Anatolia, 1913-1950 . Oxford University Press . Oxford . 2011 . 978-0-19-960360-2 . 732286833.

. Soner Cagaptay. Islam, Secularism and Nationalism in Modern Turkey: Who is a Turk?. 2006-05-02. Routledge. 978-1-134-17448-5. en. 1027167702.