Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Turkish State Wages War Against Kurdish Civilian Political Movement

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

  • Turkish State Wages War Against Kurdish Civilian Political Movement

    TURKISH STATE WAGES WAR AGAINST KURDISH CIVILIAN POLITICAL MOVEMENT
    By Ayse Gunaysu

    Armenian Weekly
    December 24, 2009

    North Kurdistan People's Initiative calls for "total revolt"

    (Special report from Istanbul by Armenian Weekly columnist Ayse
    Gunaysu)

    A scene from a Kurdish protest. (photo by Mujgan Arpat) ISTANBUL,
    Turkey (A.W.)-The Turkish state started a new war against the
    civilian Kurdish political movement in 11 provinces, from Diyarbakir
    and neighboring cities to Istanbul and Izmir. Homes of prominent DTP
    (the Kurdish party recently closed down by the Constitutional Court)
    leaders were broken into at 5 a.m. and around 60 people, including
    mayors of Kurdish provinces and districts and the human rights
    association chairperson in Diyarbakir were arrested.

    Their rights to see their lawyers are suspended for the first 24 hours.

    The Human Rights Association (HRA) Diyarbakir branch was among the
    places where searches were made. Raids and searches by security forces
    in HRA branches was something that did not happen even during the
    most difficult times of the emergency rule in the region in the 1990's.

    The news came as a shock as the former DTP leaders had declared that
    they gave up on their plans to leave the parliament and decided
    to continue their parliamentary struggle. Earlier, all hope had
    disappeared because of the closure of DTP just after the launching of
    the governments alleged peace initiative, the violent street protests
    that followed, and a suspicious ambush on a military unit in Tokat by
    a group of guerillas killing 7 soldiers triggering hateful protests
    in the west by nationalists.

    Diyarbakir Mayor Osman Baydemir gave a press conference in front of
    the Diyarbakýr DTP organization offices protesting the arrests. He
    was surrounded by DTP MPs and party leaders.

    Baydemir, regarded as a most polite and refined Kurdish leader,
    used very harsh language, even resorting to the F-word (which is,
    in Turkish, much stronger than its equivalents in western languages),
    shocking everybody. He added, "We are now violating and will continue
    to violate whatever law our arrested party leaders and mayors have
    violated." He also said, addressing the government, that they will
    not find any hand to hold when they themselves reach out tomorrow to
    the Kurdish people.

    North Kurdistan People's Initiative, a section of PKK, called for a
    "total revolt" in cities, on the streets and on the mountains.
Working...
X