Elīḥā (today called Batman) was historically inhabited by
Syriac Orthodox Christians and
Kurdish-speaking
Armenians. In the Syriac Orthodox patriarchal register of dues of 1870, it was recorded that the village had 1 household, who paid 10 dues, and did not have a church or a priest. There were 15 Armenian
hearths in 1880. There was an Armenian church of Surb Astvatsatsin. It was located in the
kaza (district) of
Beşiri in the Diyarbakır
sanjak in the
Diyarbekir vilayet in . It is tentatively identified with the village of Yliga, which was populated by 100
Syriacs in 1914, according to the list presented to the
Paris Peace Conference by the Assyro-Chaldean delegation. The Armenians were attacked by the Belek, Bekran, Şegro, and other Kurdish tribes in May 1915 amidst the
Armenian genocide. The village became the capital of a sub-neighbourhood in 1937. It was renamed Batman in 1957 and made a
neighbourhood of
Siirt Province. It became part of
Batman Province upon its formation in 1990. More than 180 civilians were killed in the Batman city area by unidentified gunmen between 1992 and 1993.
21st century In June 2000, the then-Mayor Abdullah Akın attempted to rename up to 200 streets, and give them names of events from
Kurdish history or of people who supported
Kurdish culture. A Turkish court prohibited the renaming of some streets, but a few other names were allowed to be passed. In 2010, the city was the location for the first
Kurdish film festival in Turkey. In the opening ceremony a letter of the
imprisoned mayor Nejdet Atalay was read out in the Kurdish language, highlighting the struggles the Kurds have to go through in Turkey, which does not recognise the Kurdish language. During the
2014 Kobanî protests, which were part of the broader
third phase of the
Kurdish–Turkish conflict, local Kurdish youth affiliated with the
YDG-H organized popular protests and riots in the city of Batman. This led to the arrest of several individuals, including children, accused of "spreading
PKK propaganda." Furthermore, according to
Amnesty International, several killings occurred during clashes between Kurdish youth affiliated with the YDG-H on one side, and
Turkish police and members of the
Sunni Islamist Hüda Par on the other. In November 2024, following the replacement of pro-Kurdish
Peoples' Equality and Democracy (DEM) Party mayors with government-appointed trustees in Batman and several other Kurdish-majority towns, protests and riots erupted in the city. ==Government==