Kurdistan is back in the media spotlight as the Islamic State's power spreads -- and it's up to Kurdish ex-pats to keep it there, says Resho Bistuyek.

The Kurds are finally making the news. After nearly two years of fighting between Kurdish militias and Islamic militants in Rojava, or Syrian Kurdistan -- the western part of what some hope will one day be a united Kurdish state -- the Islamic State's surge into Iraq and the threat of genocide on the slopes of Mount Sinjar have caused the international community and media to sit up and take notice. There are many reasons this is happening only now: the strategic importance of Iraqi Kurdistan's oilfields; the position of Iraq relative to Syria in the minds of the Western powers at least partly responsible for its current vulnerability; and the tendency, only now beginning to change, to think of Syria as the site of a single, unitary war rather than the cluster of smaller but no less bloody conflicts that war has become. But for Kurds -- especially those active in the Kurdish twittersphere, who wear their nationalism on their sleeves -- Rojava remains of the utmost importance. For them, the two-year struggle to hold the area has been less a part of the Syrian war than the opening battle in a much larger, longer and transformative project: the war for Kurdish unification and independence. "I’m very happy and grateful that this has finally become international news," Resho Bistuyek ( @r3sho ) told Crikey. "But the situation unfortunately had to reach the point where a whole religious community, the Kurdish Yezidis, was faced with genocide."

"In a sense, I think the Kurdish people showed their true strength in making this happen," he said. "You had People's Protection Unit (YPG) fighters enter Iraq from Rojava. Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) guerrillas came down from the mountains. The Kurdistan Democratic Party-Iran (KDP-I) guerrillas rallied to the call. And the Kurdish diaspora, together with the Kurds living in each of the four parts of Kurdistan" -- Turkey, Syria, Iraq and Iran all have Kurdish-majority areas -- "made one hell of a ruckus. We were not going to allow yet another genocide attempt on our people. The world was witnessed this seemingly anomalous behaviour -- they had never seen us so united -- and it was impossible for them to ignore the way we were organising to stop the genocide attempt on the Yezidis."