Aadel Collection
Cease-Fire Brings Peace to Kurdish City in Iran
Cease Fire Brings Peate To Kurdish Cit in Iran Th aihn rinPoit i 4k iii nrt)i. / r 4 19 9 PioQu st I stotiLil sj ij is flc Vi ish igtor Post (1877- 9)4) jg /12 Cease Fire Brimgs Peace To Kurdish. City In Iran. SANANDAJ, Iran March 23 (AP)— A cease-fire bdtween Kurdish tribes- men and government troops restored peace to this strife torn western city today after the Kurds gained prom- ises of at least limited autonomy from the Tehran administration. In downtown Sanandaj, several hun dred men loaaea tneir oags ann weap- ons aboard vehicles for the journey back to their villages. Loudspeakers blared messag s of appreciation from the people of Sanandaj for their help. The cease fire went into effect Wed- nesday night after almost four days of fighting claimed about 200 lives nd wounded hundreds. Many victims were women and children wounded by army mortar barrages and by ma chine-gun strafing by military helicop ter gunships. Religiuus and government onicials from Tehran reportedly had worked out an agreement with local Kurdish tribesmen granting the Kurds a “senu autonomous” status, But Kurdish offi- cials said it had been “simply pro- posed” by Interior Minister Seyyed Javadi and was not yet agreed to Javadi and Ayatollah Mahmoud Ta- leghani, Tebran's Shiite Moslem leader, met with Kurdish officials but it was not disclosed whether Sheik Es- zedin Hosseini—acknowledged poilti- cc 1 and religious leader of the Kurds, who are Sunni Moslems was at the meetings. Hosseini was in Sanandaj yesterday and was hailed by thou- sands of Kurds at an open-air rally, Reproduced wih permhshn of the copydght owner Further reproduchon prohh ted wihout permhshn