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  • Ocalan says his retrial would be chance to resolve Kurdish issue

    Pravda, Russia
    May 13 2005

    Rebel leader Abdullah Ocalan says his retrial would be chance to
    resolve Kurdish issue

    18:12 2005-05-13
    Imprisoned Kurdish rebel leader Abdullah Ocalan welcomed the European
    demand for his retrial, saying it will be a chance for him to demand
    greater Kurdish rights and a negotiated peace with his guerrilla
    movement, a pro-Kurdish newspaper said Friday.

    But Ocalan's desire to use the trial to gain acceptance for his
    group, which Turkey regards as a terrorist organization, is only
    likely to increase public pressure to reject the European demand and
    could even lead Turks to question whether they want to be part of a
    European Union that has the power to override Turkish courts.

    Ocalan's call comes as his Kurdistan Workers Party, or PKK, has
    become increasingly fractured and marginalized. Turks fear that he
    could try to use the trial to regain the momentum that his group has
    lost.

    Turkey rejected earlier attempts to transform the group into a
    political force by refusing any dialogue with the group.

    Today, the rebels are apparently fractured between groups that favor
    negotiations and those who believe they should return to the
    battlefield.

    The PKK's main bases are in northern Iraq, where they have some 3,500
    fighters, and Turkey has been pressing the U.S. Army to take action
    against the group. Another 1,500 fighters are believed to be inside
    Turkey.

    Reflecting the split, the rebels have recently escalated their
    attacks. Three Turkish soldiers were killed Friday in an ambush in
    southern Turkey, local authorities said.

    Turkish intelligence reports say the rebels are trying to smuggle
    plastic explosives into Turkey for attacks.

    The European Court of Human Rights called for Ocalan's retrial
    Thursday, saying that the 1999 hearing that led to his conviction on
    treason charges was not a fair and independent trial. Turkish
    officials indicated that they would heed the call.

    Ocalan, anticipating the ruling, told his lawyers Wednesday that
    Turkey should see it "as a chance given to Turkey to resolve the
    Kurdish question," the Web site of the pro-Kurdish Ozgur Politika
    said Friday.

    He also said he would use a retrial as a platform to push for a
    democratic solution to the Kurdish problem, calling it a "democratic
    struggle," instead of armed struggle, the Web site said.

    He said his guerrillas could decide whether to fight or not "with
    their free will," the newspaper reported. "If they want to be heroes,
    I'm not an obstacle before them."

    The EU agreed late last year to open accession talks with Turkey in
    October, and ignoring a European court decision could jeopardize
    Turkey's chances for membership.

    But allowing Ocalan to use the trial to promote his group would
    undermine decades of Turkish policy. Some 37,000 people have died in
    the Turkish southeast since Ocalan's group took up arms in 1984, and
    there are still some 75,000 Turkish soldiers and 50,000
    government-paid village guards in the area.

    Harsh Turkish laws that limited media freedoms were used in the past
    to stifle debate on the issue of Kurdish rights, laws that were only
    relaxed in the past year due to EU pressure.

    Allowing the trial is likely to fray nerves in Turkey, where Ocalan
    is regarded as a terrorist. Some went so far as to say Turkey should
    risk giving up its EU membership dream if it meant retrying Ocalan.

    "Tell the world immediately that Ocalan will not be retried, even if
    it means putting the EU membership in danger," wrote Emin Colasan, a
    columnist in the Hurriyet newspaper.

    "Turkey cannot digest this retrial," Colasan said. "What is at stake
    is the pride of the Turkish nation."

    Gen. Hursit Tolon, the commander of the 1st Army based in Istanbul,
    said Friday that "this decision means that 'I don't recognize your
    courts and constitution."'

    Nationalist sentiments are already on the rise in Turkey, largely as
    a reaction to EU demands that Turkey address many previously taboo
    subjects, such as minority rights for Kurds and the mass killings of
    Armenians during the collapse of the Ottoman Empire.

    Turkey regards all Muslims, including Kurds, as Turks. Prior to 1991
    it was illegal to speak Kurdish.

    Nationalist sentiments are likely to skyrocket if there is a retrial
    that is used by Ocalan to promote his separatist group. Hundreds of
    nationalists marched in Istanbul, Ankara and other cities Friday to
    protest the court ruling.

    "The retrial of the terrorist chief would turn Turkey upside down,"
    said former Deputy Premier Devlet Bahceli, the head of the
    Nationalist Movement Party.

    Ocalan was captured in Kenya in 1999 and flown to Turkey, where he
    was sentenced to death for treason for leading the rebel group. The
    punishment was commuted to life in prison after Turkey abolished the
    death penalty under EU pressure.

    SELCAN HACAOGLU,
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