WASHINGTON/SULAYMANIYAH, IRAQ - Hundreds of Iranian Kurdish members of a Muslim sect seeking to attend the funeral of their leader in neighboring Iraq have forced their way through a crossing into Iraqi territory, exposing a weakness in Iranian and Iraqi border controls aimed at curbing the spread of the coronavirus.
Video clips widely shared on social media showed the Iranian followers of the Sufi Muslim Qadiriyya sect dashing across the Bashmakh crossing from Iran’s Kurdistan province into northern Iraq’s autonomous Kurdish region Thursday. The clips were sent to VOA’s Kurdish service and published online by prominent Iraqi Kurdish news outlets Rudaw and Kurdistan24. VOA could not verify them independently.
???? ????????? ???????? ????? ?? ????????? ???????? ????? ?? ???? ?????? #?????? ??? ???? ??????????? pic.twitter.com/YECybLjrjP
— Kurdistan24 Kurdish (@kurdistan24tv) July 9, 2020
In some of the clips, gunshots could be heard as the mostly male Sufis, some dressed in traditional robes and carrying swords and daggers used in Sufi rituals, ran through the crossing.
#BREAKING: More than 200 sufi dervish followers of the Qadiriyya Religious order's late Sheikh Mohammadi Kasnazani from Iran have attacked and passed through a Kurdistan Region border crossing Thursday afternoon, brandishing swords, knives and daggers to cross. (1/2) pic.twitter.com/uM0VxIdNju
— Rudaw English (@RudawEnglish) July 9, 2020
Other clips showed groups of Sufis walking briskly over the border, some stopping briefly to kiss the ground as they reached the Iraqi side.
Iraqi Kurdish and Iranian officials each accused the other’s security forces of firing the gunshots that appeared to be aimed at stemming or stopping the flow of people through the crossing. They said several people had been injured and taken to hospitals on both sides of the border.
Iraqi Kurdish authorities previously had ordered the Bashmakh crossing to be closed to regular traffic to try to prevent an influx of potential coronavirus carriers from Iran, which has seen the region’s worst outbreak. An exception had been made for businesspeople to use the crossing.
In a phone call with VOA Kurdish, an Iraqi Kurdish official in charge of security at Bashmakh said he could not stop the entry of Iranian Kurdish Sufis because of his limited numbers of border guards and the lack of advanced warning of the influx from Iranian authorities.
“We let in the Sufis to avoid escalating the situation,” said Maj. Gen. Mariwan Sheikh Kamal.
The Iraqi Kurdish commander accused agents of Iran’s top military force, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, of firing the warning shots during the border incident.