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ANKARA: =?UNKNOWN?Q?Yalc=FDn_Do=F0an=3A_A?= Solution To The KurdishS

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  • ANKARA: =?UNKNOWN?Q?Yalc=FDn_Do=F0an=3A_A?= Solution To The KurdishS

    YALCıN DOğAN: A SOLUTION TO THE KURDISH SITUATION IS STILL OUT THERE

    Hurriyet, Turkey
    April 4 2006

    The Democratic Society (DTP) Party official from Siirt who called on
    Kurdish citizens to protest is young, still a university student. He
    is in his twenties. Would the DTP really have such a hard time finding
    a reasonable person to take this guy's place? For the past week now,
    I have been watching and reading about the events taking place in the
    Southeast and in Istanbul from abroad. The stance of the foreign press
    as to what is taking place here is frightening: they present it with
    headlines like "Kurdish uprising in Turkey." They don't perceive it
    as terror. To counter this, I have been listening to the opinions of
    some of my collegues who have actually been in Diyarbakir, and seen
    the events live and in person.

    Here is the first hand account of one of them:

    "I have seen everything happen in Diyarbakir. Those who were attacking
    the banks and the stores were in no way shouting PKK slogans. These
    were young people who had migrated to the big city from the surrounding
    countryside, and who had definitely never entered a big store to
    do shopping, who had never set foot into a bank. And now they were
    attacking banks, stores, and cars. Above and beyond the PKK, the real
    problem for these youth is unemployment, even hunger."

    The PKK is behind these people on the streets. After all, poverty
    is the biggest source of support for the PKK. Business owners in
    the Southeast have been making the same observations. They are now
    repeating the same thing they have been trying to tell Ankara for
    years: "The region needs economic development." This is not new.

    On the look out for an identity

    Of course, while this all may be true, it is not accurate to view
    the events only through the lens of the economy, nor simply through
    the lens of terror. There is, after all, Kurdish nationalism to deal
    with too. This is Kurdish nationalism that rose with the fall of the
    Ottoman Empire. Some theories say that nationalism creates nations,
    while other theories attest that nations create nationalism. I say
    that nationalism is really a search for identity. On the question
    of identity, the famous novelist Amin Maalouf has this to say: "An
    attack on a person's language is the biggest attack possible on his
    identity." (This is from Maalouf's book, 'Deadly Identities.')

    Another writer on the topic, Hakan Ozoglu, notes in his book "The
    Ottoman State and Kurdish Nationalism" that "land played an important
    role in opening the way to Kurdish nationalism and thus the development
    of the Kurdish identity." Ozoglu's thesis is that land is in fact more
    important than language and religion in terms of identity formation. I
    think Ozoglu is right here.

    Three historical reasons

    Today's separationist movement rests on a demand for land. The
    fight over identity is at the forefront of this movement. I wonder
    how effective today's Kurdish nationalism would be had there been a
    wide-spread initiative to boslter the Kurdish identity, and to remove
    the barriers from economic development in the region? Historically,
    there have been three factors which instigated Kurdish nationalism.

    These were the breakdown of the Ottoman Empire, the Kurdish-Armenian
    clashes, and the pressure of Turkish nationalism. Despite the seeming
    desperation of the situation we find ourselves in today, there is
    a solution.

    There are two basic precautions that could be taken, one political,
    the other economic, to prevent further disruption to life in the
    Southeast and throughout Turkey. The political precaution would
    be to reduce the 10% vote threshhold in the elections. Because of
    the current 10% threshhold, an entire region has no parliamentary
    representation. This matter is one of the most basic barriers to
    solving the Kurdish problem. Let the 10% threshhold be reduced, and
    allow Kurdish parties representation in the Turkish Parliament (TBMM).

    The second precaution that could be taken is economic. There has
    to be a shift in programs that will help reduce unemployment in the
    region. Programs favoring investment in the Southeast must be given
    priority. The sabotage by the PKK against some of the new investments
    in the Southeast only serves to underline what a potentially important
    effect these programs could have on the region. The time when we
    could simply view these events as terrorism has now passed.

    We are facing a problem which must be solved as a whole, not just in
    bits and pieces.

    --Boundary_(ID_DspLojBs97NSx1vxzkMW4Q)--
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