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Al-Jazeera: Broken bridges in Turkey's southeast

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  • Al-Jazeera: Broken bridges in Turkey's southeast

    Broken bridges in Turkey's southeast
    By Kirsty Hughes in Van

    Aljazeera.net, Qatar
    Nov 4 2006

    Saturday 04 November 2006, 16:04 Makka Time, 13:04 GMT

    On a sparkling autumn day, a few tourists and locals are visiting
    the half-restored, 2nd-century Armenian church on Akdamar island in
    eastern Turkey's Lake Van. But there are no Armenians here.

    And tourists are a rare breed in this conflict-ridden region too. It
    was in this region of Turkey that Armenians say they were massacred
    by Turkish forces 90 years ago.

    While the best lakeside houses and flats are occupied by military and
    police families, the run-down streets of Van are now thronged with
    mostly unemployed Kurdish men and boys (women in this conservative
    town mostly stay at home). It is a region steeped in poverty.

    Van's population has more than doubled since the early 1990s due
    to displaced villagers fleeing the conflict between the Kurdistan
    Worker's Party (PKK) and the Turkish military - and not least due
    to the destruction by the military of thousands of Kurdish villages
    especially in 1993-94.

    For Turkey, the EU and US the PKK is a terrorist organisation.

    But local Kurds reject that label. They say few families have been
    untouched by the Turkish military's retribution in the past 22 years
    of conflict.

    Many have a son, daughter, cousin, uncle or brother either in the
    mountains with the PKK, in jail, or dead from the conflict.

    Limits on freedoms

    Cuneyit Canis, head of the Van Human Rights Association, explains
    that neither they, nor other human rights NGO, will use the label:
    "Of course, we are against violence wherever it comes from, but we
    never say terrorist - if we use the same language as the state or
    government, then how do we differ from them?"

    Limits on freedom of speech worry Cunis: "If you say Turks and Kurds
    don't have equal rights in society, even if you are talking in a
    political party, you could be accused of being a separatist. The DTP
    [the Kurdish Democratic Society Party] is a legal political party ...

    but they often get mixed up [by the police] with the PKK, so it's
    easy to charge DTP members to be PKK."

    Ibrahim Sunkur, the head of the Van branch of the DTP, agrees: "To
    be a political party, you need to have meetings, to express ideas,
    to have freedom of speech, but we are not completely free as all our
    activities are followed by the police and they are going to open a
    court case even if we say simple and basic things."

    Sunkur has been president of the local DTP for less than a year -
    all previous presidents have been arrested sooner or later. After he
    took part in a local TV debate two weeks ago, the military came to the
    TV station and demanded copies of the tapes to analyse what he said.

    EU impact

    Turkey's membership talks with the EU have had some positive but
    limited impact on Kurdish rights in recent years. As one retired
    intellectual in Van puts it: "There were very good steps during the
    EU process but not enough. If it wasn't scared of the EU and US,
    Turkey would take back all the rights it has given very easily."

    For Ayhan Cabuk, head of the Van Bar Association, these steps
    are the merest tokens: "Many people here are living and speaking
    Kurdish and under pressure of the EU you give them half an hour a
    week broadcasting but not by yourself. That's nothing. How can that
    be an answer to the problem? The limit of half an hour shows their
    mentality and their hearts."

    And this month, the military found a way to jam the frequency through
    which Kurdish TV is beamed into homes from abroad.

    Speak their language

    Yet today the central demand of many Kurds is not for the separate
    state that the Turks so fear, and not even for a federation (publicly
    calling for a federation itself could lead to separatist and so
    terrorist charges) but for the use of their mother tongue in education
    and in the media.

    Even though there are between 15 to 20 million Kurds in Turkey, and
    many in the southeast speak Kurdish as their first or only language,
    children start primary school understanding only Kurdish, but are
    spoken to and taught in Turkish.

    One teacher quotes a now-dead Kurdish writer from Diyarbakir who
    described this as: "cats barking like dogs".

    Sunkur insists cultural rights are now their main demand: "We aren't
    looking for an independent state, and we've taken back a step on the
    federal goal - even though big countries like the US, Germany and
    Russia have federations and it's normal and they are thinking of it
    in Iraq now.

    "But we do not want to damage the unity of the state. We want to
    use our language freely and to have education in their mother tongue
    for all our children at all levels... We've a right to broadcast our
    language in radio and TV too."

    Unilateral ceasefire

    At the start of October, the PKK declared a unilateral ceasefire
    raising hopes in the southeast that a new breakthrough may be possible,
    including a general amnesty for PKK fighters.

    But General Buyukanit, the new military chief of staff, ignoring more
    subtle and positive responses from various politicians, responded
    aggressively saying the army would fight till every last PKK fighter
    was dead.

    Abdulbasit Bildirici, the head of the local branch of an Islamic
    human rights NGO Mazlumder, is pessimistic: "There was a group in
    government and in the military supporting this ceasefire but then the
    'deep state' won and shut up the others, and there have been four
    or five big military operations in and around the region recently so
    they are not responding to the ceasefire."

    Army lorries and police checks can be seen in and around Van.

    Bildirici thinks this ceasefire is a "last chance for Turkey" since
    if the government doesn't respond: "It makes ceasefires meaningless
    to people's minds... this feeling is very strong."

    He worries that divisions between Turks and Kurds have become deepened:
    "There is a broken bridge between the state and people here."

    A local businessman puts it even more strongly: "You [the Turkish
    state] accuse people of not loving you, but you broke all their lives
    and stole their windows, took their property, and took everything,
    and now they are in an indescribable, inhuman situation and you ask
    them to love you and be grateful."

    Solution sought

    The ending of the last PKK ceasefire two years ago, accompanied by
    renewed violence, and the Iraq conflict, has not made the Turkish
    public, government or military more open to a peaceful solution. "Of
    course," says Bildirici "the northern Iraq and Kurdish situation
    increased the nationalist movement in Turkey."

    He adds that for Kurds in Turkey, seeing Kurds in northern Iraq run
    their own affairs is a boost to self-confidence after the "humiliation"
    of being second-class citizens in Turkey. But he insists that "apart
    from a few small radical groups, most Kurds in Turkey have no idea
    of having an independent state here".

    But though many Kurds here are clear on their two main aims of a
    general amnesty and full cultural rights, there is an absence of
    a political strategy for persuading their Turkish counterparts to
    accept those goals.

    Instead, a sense of political as much as geographic isolation and
    impasse hangs over Van.

    Turkey is now in the run-up to presidential and parliamentary elections
    next year - and parties of all colours are turning up their nationalist
    rhetoric. Whether the glimmer of hope provided by the new PKK ceasefire
    can take the two sides past the elections and into a constructive
    new political dynamic remains to be seen.

    http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/27DB CE86-9BBA-42EC-87AF-C91ED11F3A7B.htm
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