Statistical pocketbook of the Islamic Republic of Iran (1390 Iranian year)(PDF). Statistical Centre of Iran. 2012. «In the same period, Bushehr, Kurdistan and Qom provinces were without nomadic population. The largest number of nomadic population during the winter quarter lived in Fars province which included 27,279 households and the population of 147,821. In this period only Kurdistan was without nomadic population»
Statistical pocketbook of the Islamic Republic of Iran (1390 Iranian year)(PDF). Statistical Centre of Iran. 2012. «In the same period, Bushehr, Kurdistan and Qom provinces were without nomadic population. The largest number of nomadic population during the winter quarter lived in Fars province which included 27,279 households and the population of 147,821. In this period only Kurdistan was without nomadic population»
«German Kurds hold anti-Erdogan protest». The Globalist (på engelsk). 18. mars 2017. Besøkt 8. februar 2019. «Nearly 1% of the population of Germany – more than 600,000 people – is ethnically Kurdish. Source: Encyclopedia of Diasporas, BBC, Rudaw»
«Kurdish exiles dream of home but fear for the future». The Daily Star Newspaper - Lebanon. 25. april 2003. Arkivert fra originalen 9. februar 2019. Besøkt 8. februar 2019. «There are around 50 million Kurds spread around four different countries; Turkey, Syria, Iraq and Iran. Approximately 700,000 Kurds live in Germany, around 500,000 from Turkey. Since the foundation of the PKK in 1978, Kurds have come to Germany as refugees, and have remained here as exiles.»
«Kurdish youth in Germany call for violent protest in Europe». Deutsche Welle (på engelsk). 12. mars 2018. Besøkt 8. februar 2019. «A Kurdish youth group in Germany is vowing to bring destruction to Europe, following several attacks on Turkish targets.»
«Kurds in Germany march against Turkey's 'massacre' in Afrin». Deutsche Welle (på engelsk). 17. mars 2018. Besøkt 8. februar 2019. «More than 10,000 Kurdish protesters and their leftist supporters marched through the streets of Hanover on Saturday in a politically charged demonstration against Turkey's military offensive against the Syrian Kurdish enclave of Afrin.»
educationiran.com
targan.ir, Targan Management Systems-. «About North Khorasan». North Khorasan University of Medical Sciences (på persisk). Arkivert fra originalen 19. april 2023. Besøkt 17. april 2023.
Vahid Rashidvash, Department of Iranian Studies, Yerevan State University, Yerevan, Armenia (2013). «Iranian People: Iranian Ethnic Groups»(PDF). International Journal of Humanities and Social Science.
«Iraqi Christians say forced to flee Mosul - Iraq». ReliefWeb (på engelsk). 13. oktober 2008. Besøkt 7. februar 2019. «Maliki has ordered an investigation and vowed to protect Christians in Mosul, long known as one of Iraq's most tolerant cities and home to an ethnic mix of Arabs, Kurds and Turkmen, including Muslims, Christians and other small minority sects.»
rollingstone.com
Hermes, Will; Hermes, Will (17. juli 2018). «Førdefestivalen 2018 Offers an International Musical Feast, With Stunning Views». Rolling Stone (på engelsk). Besøkt 8. februar 2019. «Another standout was Aynur Doğan, the Kurdish singer who performs as Aynur, and whose piercing tones open and close The Music of Strangers, the documentary on Yo-Yo Ma’s international music collective, the Silk Road Ensemble. Aynur grew up in eastern Turkey, and moved to Istanbul in the Seventies. But as a Kurd, an Alevi Muslim and a woman, she struggled in a tremendously repressive culture. Few Turkish musicians would work with a singer determined to perform Kurdish songs, and with the escalation of the Turkish-Kurdish conflict in 2015, she fled Istanbul to live in the Netherlands, where she found kindred players.»
Andrew Gilbert (17. september 2006). «Kurdish voice in a new world». San Francisco Chronicle. Besøkt 8. februar 2019. «For Aynur Dogan, the simple act of singing publicly in her native language is a fraught political act. As a Turkish-born Kurd, she is fast becoming the international face of her beleaguered people, one of the largest ethnic groups in the world without a country to call its own.»
«Kurdish exiles dream of home but fear for the future». The Daily Star Newspaper - Lebanon. 25. april 2003. Arkivert fra originalen 9. februar 2019. Besøkt 8. februar 2019. «There are around 50 million Kurds spread around four different countries; Turkey, Syria, Iraq and Iran. Approximately 700,000 Kurds live in Germany, around 500,000 from Turkey. Since the foundation of the PKK in 1978, Kurds have come to Germany as refugees, and have remained here as exiles.»
targan.ir, Targan Management Systems-. «About North Khorasan». North Khorasan University of Medical Sciences (på persisk). Arkivert fra originalen 19. april 2023. Besøkt 17. april 2023.