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ANKARA: Council Of Europe Calls For Legal Reforms To Improve Kurdish

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  • ANKARA: Council Of Europe Calls For Legal Reforms To Improve Kurdish

    COUNCIL OF EUROPE CALLS FOR LEGAL REFORMS TO IMPROVE KURDISH RIGHTS

    Turkish Daily News
    Wednesday, September 19, 2007

    In a report penned following a fact-finding mission last month
    to southeastern Anatolia, the Council of Europe urges the Turkish
    government to introduce legal amendments to the municipality law and
    broaden changes to encompass 'Kurdish language-related reforms'

    The Congress Bureau of the Council of Europe discussed a report Monday
    aimed at investigating legal charges against two pro-Kurdish mayors
    and 17 councilmen in southeastern Anatolia.

    The report calls for changes to Turkey's law on municipalities and
    for broadening the reforms to encompass Kurdish-language related ones.

    A high-level political delegation from the Council of Europe which
    is based in Strasbourg traveled to Diyarbakýr and Ankara last month
    to focus on local democracy particularly in southeastern Anatolia,
    after concerns about the increasing court cases against mayors of the
    pro-Kurdish Democratic Society Party (DTP). The rapporteurs drafted
    a report following the visit and submitted it to the Congress Bureau.

    "In our view, the current law [on municipalities], in both its
    substantive and its procedural aspects, is so flawed as to be
    unsustainable," said the report and listed the shortcomings.

    "There is the asserted but fraught distinction between 'international'
    and 'ethnic' languages; there is the confusion over what exactly
    constitutes a 'political' abuse of power by public authorities; there
    is uncertainty about the distinction between those things done under
    the authority of an official resolution and those done as a matter
    of administrative practice; there is uncertainty, evidenced by the
    procedures in the Sur case itself, about the procedural protections
    available to the mayor and councilors when legal measures are
    taken against them; and, perhaps above all, we are unhappy about the
    apparently arbitrary way in which the law may be invoked and enforced
    against different instances of alleged breach of the law."

    Two mayors and 17 councilmen in Diyarbakýr who introduced Kurdish
    and other languages in office are facing jail terms of up to three
    years. The accused include Diyarbakýr Mayor Osman Baydemir and Abdullah
    Demirbaþ, who was removed from his post as mayor of Diyarbakýr's
    multi-ethnic Sur municipality in June after the city council allowed
    the use of Kurdish, Armenian, Arabic, Assyrian and English in the
    municipal services.

    "We have some sympathy with claims that abrupt action was taken
    against Sur in circumstances where other authorities have been
    left unscathed. It is, therefore, our view that, rather than simply
    undertaking a narrow reform of the Municipality Law in isolation,
    a broader review of existing law should also be adopted," said
    the report.

    The trial of Baydemir, Demirbaþ and the 17 city councilmen who voted
    for the municipal bill on the use of Kurdish as well as other languages
    in office is scheduled to begin in November.

    Turkey's ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) has drawn on
    substantial electoral support from the Kurdish population but the
    July 22 general elections also paved the way for the representation
    of the DTP in the Turkish Parliament, said the report.

    "The [Turkish] Parliament has a new speaker. The State has a new
    president, who has expressed the desire to introduce new constitutional
    measures. These developments have the possibility of producing the
    momentum for the sort of broad political change, which could readily
    encompass the Kurdish language-related reforms of both law and policy
    that are so clearly needed. The Congress should, we believe, express
    its confidence in the commitment and capacity of the new political
    leadership of Turkey to make substantial progress in this direction,"
    the report said.

    The Congress also decided to extend an invitation to Professor Beþir
    Atalay, Turkey's new interior minister, to address the Congress, on
    the occasion of its November fall session in Strasbourg, and outline
    the policy that the new Turkish government intends to follow with
    regard to the specified issues.

    "Moreover the Congress could encourage the Turkish government, as it
    ventures on a new phase of reform and modernization, to underpin its
    commitment to diversity and pluralism by signing the European Charter
    for Regional or Minority Languages and the Framework Convention for
    the Protection of National Minorities. The Congress, for its part,
    could stress that it remains at the disposal of the Turkish authorities
    and would be willing to undertake a further mission to Turkey, should
    this be appropriate," the report said.

    The Congress Bureau has two chambers, the Chamber of Local Authorities
    and the Chamber of Regions. It brings together 318 full and 318
    substitute members representing more than 200,000 European territorial
    communities.

    A Council of Europe official previously told the Turkish Daily News
    that Congress reports are not binding but relevant governments take
    them seriously to show that they are open to progress on human rights

    --Boundary_(ID_Lq9qSRIdWfF4N26lntsdEg)--
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