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Turkey and the Kurds - Peace be unto you

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  • Turkey and the Kurds - Peace be unto you

    Turkey and the Kurds

    Peace be unto you

    Aug 18th 2005 | ANKARA AND DIYARBAKIR
    The Economist print edition


    The Turkish prime minister paves the way for a deal with the Kurds

    WHEN Turkey's prime minister came to power some 30 months ago, few
    expected his mildly Islamic government to resolve the country's knotty
    Kurdish question. But last week, in a landmark speech in Diyarbakir,
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan became the first Turkish leader ever to admit
    that Turkey had mishandled its rebellious Kurds. Like all great
    nations, declared Mr Erdogan, Turkey needed to face up to its past. He
    added that more democracy, not more repression, was the answer to the
    Kurds' long-running grievances.

    Mr Erdogan's visit to the largest city in the mostly Kurdish
    south-east followed ground-breaking talks with a group of Turkish
    intellectuals, seen by some as mouthpieces for rebels of the outlawed
    PKK terrorist group. In these talks, Mr Erdogan pledged that, despite
    a renewed spasm of rebel violence, there would be no going back on his
    reforms. The Kurdish problem, he said, could not be solved through
    purely military means.

    The opposition is crying treason. "This will inevitably lead to
    bargaining with the PKK," fumed Deniz Baykal, leader of the Republican
    People's Party. Nationalists within Mr Erdogan's own Justice and
    Development party have also made angry noises. The army has so far
    kept silent, even though some retired generals have called for the
    reintroduction of emergency rule in the Kurdish provinces.

    The Kurds have been only a little less provocative. Embarrassingly few
    showed up at Mr Erdogan's rally. Diyarbakir's mayor, Osman Baydemir,
    later boasted that "we could have bused in a million people had we
    wanted." Orhan Dogan, another Kurdish leader, stoked nationalist fury
    when he told a newspaper that Turkey would have to negotiate with the
    PKK and that the group's imprisoned leader, Abdullah Ocalan, would
    walk free one day. Some Kurds saluted Mr Erdogan for his courage, but
    even they insisted that he must match his words with deeds.

    There are encouraging signs that he will. Within hours of returning
    from Diyarbakir, Mr Erdogan urged media supervisors to allow regional
    radio and television stations to broadcast in Kurdish. But more needs
    to be done if Turkey's Kurds are not to be infected by calls for
    independence by Iraq's powerful Kurds next door. Measures to stimulate
    the economy of the impoverished Kurdish provinces must be a priority,
    as Mr Erdogan has acknowledged. That will necessitate also the return
    of hundreds of thousands of Kurds expelled from their villages by the
    army during its scorched-earth campaign against the PKK.

    Mr Erdogan's call to put right past mistakes will ring hollow unless
    the state compensates the Kurds for their losses. The interior
    ministry revealed this week that only 5,239 of a total 104,734 victims
    who had applied under a new law for such compensation had been
    considered, and only 1,190 were to be paid anything. With the deadline
    for applications past, the programme "is a complete fiasco", declared
    Mesut Deger, an opposition Kurdish deputy, who is pressing for an
    extension.

    Lastly, Mr Erdogan must find a way of giving an amnesty to 5,000
    rebels, entrenched in the mountains of south-east Turkey and northern
    Iraq, that is acceptable to Turks and Kurds alike. The PKK was
    expected this week to announce a suspension of hostilities, to allow
    such a deal to be done. Should Mr Erdogan come up with a workable
    pardon, vowed Naci Aslan, another opposition Kurdish deputy, "I will
    erect his statue, kiss his feet
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