Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

BDP Expresses Grave Concerns Over Diyarbakir Attacks

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

  • BDP Expresses Grave Concerns Over Diyarbakir Attacks

    BDP EXPRESSES GRAVE CONCERNS OVER DIYARBAKIR ATTACKS

    Armenian Weekly
    July 19, 2012

    The Peace and Democracy Party (BDP) Representative in the U.S.,
    based in Washington, D.C., wrote the following on July 17.

    The recent "Democratic Struggle for Freedom" demonstration organized by
    the Peace and Democracy Party (BDP) and Democratic Society Congress
    (DTK) on July 14 in Diyarbakir (Amed), Turkey, was both banned
    and violently suppressed by Turkish security forces. Demonstrators
    had gathered to deliver a clear message to the ruling Justice and
    Development Party (AKP) that the Kurdish issue can only be solved
    through peaceful means and the restarting of negotiations with the
    imprisoned leader of the Kurdish political movement, Abdullah Ocalan.

    Turkish security forces confronted the peaceful demonstrators,
    detaining and injuring many, including Kurdish deputies from the
    National Assembly.

    The Turkish government must put an end to the use of force if it
    sincerely wishes to solve the Kurdish issue.

    The Turkish government must put an end to the use of force if it
    sincerely wishes to solve the Kurdish issue. The ruling government AKP
    should take immediate steps to end the isolation of Ocalan and free
    him by initiating sincere peace talks to resolve the Kurdish issue.

    Negotiations between Ocalan and state officials stalled one year ago
    in the wake of the national elections in July 2011 in Turkey. Since
    then, Ocalan has been held under complete isolation without access
    to his lawyers. Furthermore, all of his lawyers were arrested, which
    is a complete violation of international agreements regarding the
    treatment of prisoners. The EU Commission and Council of Europe,
    as well as others in the international community, have criticized
    such treatment as a violation of fundamental liberties.

    The steady rise in violent incidents in Turkey since July 2011 is
    a significant reason why peace talks are necessary more than ever
    before. Hundreds of soldiers and guerillas have lost their lives in
    violent clashes, and thousands of people have been affected adversely.

    Furthermore, the Turkish government has arrested over 8,000 Kurdish
    political activists, including elected deputies and mayors, human
    rights activists, attorneys, doctors, journalists, academics,
    students, and unionists. Rather than making most of the changing
    mindset in Turkish society with regards to the Kurdish issue by
    advancing a meaningful dialogue with the Kurdish political movement,
    the AKP government has, since July 2011, implemented a brutal security
    doctrine.

    Renewed military operations in the Kurdish regions have resulted
    in many deaths and continue to threaten the livelihoods of millions
    of people. In December 2011, an air attack by the Turkish military
    resulted in the killing of 34 Kurdish civilians, most of them children,
    in the district of Uludere (Roboski) in Turkey. This attack was carried
    out under the auspices of the AKP and was reported in detail by the
    American mainstream media because of the use of U.S. drone
    intelligence.

    The Turkish government has also taken a step backwards with regards
    to the Kurdish issue by preventing Kurds from freely expressing their
    cultural heritage. While the AKP claims it is making progress on
    Kurdish rights in Turkey, Kurdish people are still unable to express
    their identity without fear and intimidation. Just this year, the AKP
    implemented a ban on the Kurdish New Year, or Newroz, celebrations. In
    March 2012, Kurdish celebrators were met with violence by Turkish
    security forces and were forced to end their peaceful celebrations.

    We, the BDP Representative Office in the U.S., strongly condemn the
    Turkish government's use of disproportional force against the Kurdish
    people and their representatives including the co-presidents of our
    party, Selahattin Demirtas and Gultan Kisanak. The violent use of
    force by Turkish security forces on July 14 is yet another example
    of the authoritarian tendencies of the AKP government. We believe
    that the Kurdish conflict in Turkey can only be resolved through
    inclusive democratic practices that include dialogue and negotiations
    with Abdullah Ocalan and the Kurdish political movement. Talks and
    negotiations between Turkish state authorities and Abdullah Ocalan
    should be restarted in order for a lasting peace to prevail. Peace
    talks and negotiations like those between ANC-Mandela and the South
    Africa government or IRA-Sinn Fein and the UK government should be
    a source of inspiration for Turkish government. These successful
    experiences were encouraged by the U.S. administration.

    We urge the U.S. president, Congress and Senate, and the American
    civil society and media not to remain silent with regards to Turkey's
    gross human rights record against the Kurdish people, and to encourage
    a peaceful solution to the Kurdish issue that includes sincere peace
    talks with the arrested Kurdish leader Abdullah Ocalan and the Kurdish
    political movement.

Working...
X