Abstract

Environmental destruction has long been used as a military strategy in times of conflict. A long-term example of environmental destruction in a conflict zone can be found in Dersim/Tunceli province, located in Eastern Turkey. In the last century, at least two military operations negatively impacted Dersim’s population and environment: 1937–38 and 1993–94. Both conflict and environmental destruction in the region continued after the 1990s. Particularly after July 2015, when the brief peace process that began in 2013 ended, conflict between the Turkish state and the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) resumed and questions arose about the cause of forest fires in Dersim. In this research we investigate whether there is a relationship between conflict and forest fires in Dersim. This is denied by the Turkish state but asserted by many Dersim residents, civil society groups, and political parties. We use a multi-disciplinary approach, combining methods of qualitative analysis of print media (newspapers), social media (Twitter), and local accounts, together with quantitative methods: remote sensing and spatial analysis. Interdisciplinary analysis combining quantitative datasets with in-depth, qualitative data allows a better understanding of the role of conflict in potentially exacerbating the frequency and severity of forest fires. Although we cannot determine the cause of the fires, the results of our statistical analysis suggest a significant relationship between fires and conflict in Dersim, indicating that the incidence of conflicts is generally correlated with the number of fires.

Highlights

  • Environmental destruction has long been used as a military tactic in times of conflict

  • A long-lasting example of environmental destruction in a conflict zone can be found in Dersim/Tunceli,1 a province located in Eastern Turkey

  • We focus on the four years after 2015, following the end of the peace process between Turkey and the PKK

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Summary

Introduction

Environmental destruction has long been used as a military tactic in times of conflict. University, Kampala, Uganda between Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo. In all these cases, forests were viewed as shelter and food sources (i.e., by the local community, rebel groups, or guerrilla fighters) and targeted (Hough 2014; Austin and Bruch 2000). A long-lasting example of environmental destruction in a conflict zone can be found in Dersim/Tunceli, a province located in Eastern Turkey. There have been numerous military operations in the region, conducted by both the Ottoman and Turkish armies, leading to thousands of civilian deaths, forced displacement, as well as the destruction (mainly via burning) of forests, Hum Ecol (2021) 49:481–493 agricultural fields, and villages (Bulut 2013; Bilmez et al 2011; Algör 2010). The events in 1937–38 are referred to as tertele in the native language, which means being upside down, implying devastation across individual, societal, and environmental dimensions, connotating to genocide

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