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Paris Shootings Murdered Kurdish Activists Had Ties To Germany

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  • Paris Shootings Murdered Kurdish Activists Had Ties To Germany

    PARIS SHOOTINGS MURDERED KURDISH ACTIVISTS HAD TIES TO GERMANY

    AFP / IHLAS NEWS AGENCY
    Slain Kurdish activist Sakine Cansiz (L) with Abdullah Öcalan, the
    leader of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), in 1995.

    The murder of three Kurdish activists in Paris last week remains
    a mystery, but SPIEGEL has uncovered details about their ties to
    Germany. Two of the women were under investigation by German federal
    prosecutors.

    Two of the three Kurdish Workers' Party (PKK) activists shot to death
    last week in Paris were important functionaries within the banned
    organization's German wing, and were also under investigation here,
    SPIEGEL has learned.

    ANZEIGE

    The German attorney general was looking into potential criminal
    activities by Sakine Cansiz and Leyla Söylemez, who were found murdered
    along with a third woman at the Kurdish Information Center in the
    French capital last Thursday. They were suspected of supporting a
    terrorist organization abroad.

    Cansiz was known as an important figure in the northern German cadre
    of the PKK, the Kurdish separatist group considered to be a terrorist
    organization by Turkey and most Western countries. She was also a
    member of the Kurdish National Congress in Brussels.

    In March 2007, authorities arrested Cansiz in a café in Hamburg's
    Schanzenviertel district with an international warrant issued by
    Turkey, but the city's regional appeals court opted not to extradite
    her. The court ruled that the accusations against Cansiz were too
    vague.

    Concurrently, however, Hamburg state prosecutors began investigating
    her for her role in the PKK. Federal prosecutors took over the case
    in 2008.

    A close companion of now imprisoned PKK leader Abdullah Öcalan,
    Cansiz herself spent some 12 years in Turkey's Diyarbakir Prison,
    notorious for the systematic torture that took place there, and later
    went on to become an important PKK representative in Europe. In 1998
    France granted Cansiz asylum, but most recently she was thought to
    have spent time in the Kurdish region of northern Iraq.

    New Strain on Peace Efforts

    Leyla Söylemez's connection to Germany began in the 1990s, when she
    fled here with her family. Living in the eastern German city of Halle,
    she studied architecture and was an active member of the PKK youth
    branch. Some years ago, however, she quit her studies, apparently to
    concentrate fully on her political activities.

    While it remains unclear exactly who might be behind the mysterious
    shootings, the triple-murder in Paris is likely to strain recent
    efforts toward reconciliation between the Turkish government and the
    PKK. On Dec. 28, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan revealed
    during a television interview that after a long hiatus, his government
    had renewed talks with PKK leader Öcalan, who is currently in solitary
    confinement on the island of Imrali, in the Sea of Marmara. Shortly
    thereafter, one of Erdogan's advisors disclosed that the head of
    Turkey's MIT intelligence agency, Hakan Fidan, had spent Dec. 23 and
    24 on the island to meet with the prisoner.

    The New Year then brought permission for two Kurdish politicians to
    meet with Öcalan as well. It was the first time since his arrest
    and imprisonment that he was given such a privilege, and its very
    occurrence is evidence that the man seen as a terrorist leader by
    the majority of the Turkish government is now ready to take an active
    role in finding a peaceful solution to decades of bloody conflict in
    the country's southeast.

    Turkish media had also recently reported that a fundamental agreement
    had already been made. Some suspect that the murders were an attempt
    to stall the peace talks, though it remains unclear who was responsible
    and both sides are blaming each other for the crime.

    Over the weekend some 15,000 people from around Europe -- many of
    them Kurds living in Germany -- gathered in Paris to demand justice
    in the murders in Paris.

    Appearing on television on Saturday, Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan
    demanded that France solve the murders "immediately," and criticized
    the country for granting Cansiz asylum. Turkey has frequently
    criticized European nations for inadequate support in its fight
    against the PKK, and Erdogan also mentioned Germany's decision not
    to extradite Cansiz in 2007.

    SPIEGEL/kla

    http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/kurdish-activists-murdered-in-paris-had-german-ties-a-877352.html

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