Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Kurds Risk Jail In Turkey In Language Row

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Kurds Risk Jail In Turkey In Language Row

    KURDS RISK JAIL IN TURKEY IN LANGUAGE ROW

    Agence France Presse -- English
    July 30, 2007 Monday 11:05 AM GMT
    Diyarbakir, Turkey

    Turkish prosecutors are seeking jail terms of up to three years for
    two Kurdish mayors and 17 aldermen who introduce Kurdish and other
    languages in office, court officials said Monday.

    According to the constitution, Turkish is the sole official
    language and no other languages can be used in government offices
    and municipalities.

    The accused include Osman Baydemir, one of Turkey's most popular
    Kurdish politicians and the mayor of Diyarbakir, the main city in
    the Kurdish-majority southeast.

    The other politician charged is Abdullah Demirbas, who was removed
    last month from his post as mayor of Sur, Diyarbakir's multi-ethnic
    old town, after the city council in January allowed the use of Kurdish,
    Armenian, Arabic, Assyriac and English in municipal services.

    The charge sheet accused the defendants of "abuse of office" and
    sought prison sentences ranging from one to three years.

    The trial of Baydemir, Demirbas and the 17 city councilmen who voted
    for the municipal bill is scheduled to begin on November 7.

    Diyarbakir's governor, Ankara's top representative in the area,
    has asked a district court to scrap the multi-lingual service.

    Anakara has in recent years -- under European Union pressure to
    improve its human rights record -- legalised broadcasts in Kurdish
    and allowed private institutions to teach the Kurdish language.

    The law, however, still requires Kurds to use solely Turkish, the
    only official language, in official communications and politics.

    Kurdish activists insists that Kurdish should be taught in schools
    and used in all spheres of public life.

    Ankara fears that broader Kurdish cultural freedoms may embolden
    the armed separatist campaign of Kurdish rebels fighting the central
    government since 1984. The conflict has claimed more than 37,000 lives.
Working...
X