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'''Hasankeyf''' is a city in Southeatern ], ] located along the ]. It is an ancient city, with roots going back 10,000 years. It was declared a natural conservation area by Turkey in ] . ] — an area mainly settled by ].]]'''Hasankeyf''' is a city in Southeatern ], ] located along the ]. It is an ancient city, with roots going back 10,000 years. It was declared a natural conservation area by Turkey in ] .


The city's historical treasures will be inundated if construction of the ] — a part of the ] — is completed. These include ornate ]s, ]ic ]s and cave ]es. The archaelogical and religious significance can hardly be measured; the city's history spans nine civilizations and warrants designation as a world heritage site by ], according to the ] The city's historical treasures will be inundated if construction of the ] — a part of the ] — is completed. These include ornate ]s, ]ic ]s and cave ]es. The archaelogical and religious significance can hardly be measured; the city's history spans nine civilizations and warrants designation as a world heritage site by ], according to the ]

Revision as of 04:57, 25 November 2005

Hasankeyf is in southeast Turkey — an area mainly settled by Kurds.

Hasankeyf is a city in Southeatern Anatolia, Turkey located along the Dicle River. It is an ancient city, with roots going back 10,000 years. It was declared a natural conservation area by Turkey in 1981 .

The city's historical treasures will be inundated if construction of the Ilısu Dam — a part of the GAP project — is completed. These include ornate mosques, Islamic tombs and cave churches. The archaelogical and religious significance can hardly be measured; the city's history spans nine civilizations and warrants designation as a world heritage site by UNESCO, according to the Kurdish Human Rights Project

The town is of particular cultural significance to the Kurdish people: the delegation found a widespread perception that the GAP project, and Ilısu in particular, is motivated primarily by a desire to destroy the Kurds as an ethnic group by destroying their most important cultural sites. .

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