Batman Beşiri'de Ezidilerin köyüne el koydular. Kuşçukuru köyü

Yazidi families who left Kuşçukuru Village, Batman, in 1992 due to oppression and whose properties they entrusted to their neighbors were confiscated when they went to Germany have also won their legal battle for their homes, which were seized after their land was confiscated. The families are now expecting opinion leaders and the state to intervene to facilitate the peaceful return of their confiscated properties. Yazidi families living in Kuşçukuru village, in the Beşiri district of Batman province, were forced to abandon their land and move to Germany in 1992 due to political and religious pressure. The families entrusted all their real estate to the elders of the Karabulut and Biter families through a protocol signed by a notary public. Yazidi families, who had been waiting for years for the day they would be reunited with their longed-for lands, returned to Turkey in 2012 due to the changing political climate. However, the real estate they had expected to be returned to them was not returned but seized. After all their efforts in this direction failed, the families appealed to the courts with the signed protocol in hand. The Batman Second Civil Court of First Instance, which heard the case, found the Yazidi families right. Following the objection, the Supreme Court of Appeals ruled that the case be divided into houses and lands. In the reopened trial, the lands were handed over to Yazidi families in 2018 by a local court decision. Following this decision, when they attempted to cultivate their land, they were repeatedly subjected to violence and threats from the defendants, who refused to comply with the court order. Until now, they have been able to cultivate their lands under the protection of soldiers. The lawsuit filed by the families regarding their seized homes was concluded on October 18th, and the return of all properties was ordered. One of those who fought this issue for years was Nedım Erkiş, who was forced to migrate to Germany with his family at the age of 17 and later returned. ERDİŞ stated that they were happy with the court's decision, but added that they were still encountering resistance regarding the return of their property. Their expectation on this issue is for the public, opinion leaders, and state institutions to intervene so they can return to their homes and lands.