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Constructive dialogue is the only answer to the PKK-Turkey conflict

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  • Constructive dialogue is the only answer to the PKK-Turkey conflict

    Constructive dialogue is the only answer to the PKK-Turkey conflict

    Kurdish Media, UK
    Nov 3 2006

    11/3/2006 KurdishMedia.com - By Rauf Naqishbendi

    The diplomatic efforts between Washington and Ankara have been
    incessant since the beginning of the Iraqi Liberation Campaign,
    with the Turks hounding the United States' officials, pushing three
    of their main agendas: muting the Iraqi Kurds' demand for statehood,
    crushing the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), and of course, as always,
    begging for foreign aid and more weapons.

    Muting the Iraqi Kurds' Demand for Statehood

    Since the collapse of the Ottoman Empire, the mindset of the Turks
    regarding the Kurds has been that if they were to renounce their
    heritage, abdicate their culture, abandon their language and proudly
    announce themselves Turks, then they could be free, not as Turks but
    as moderate second-class citizens. To accomplish this, they engaged
    in a campaign of intimidation, cruelty and repression. And they
    didn't stop with the idea of the wholesale conversion of Kurds to
    Turks, but claim that freedom would be like a serpent to the Kurds,
    their sovereignty poisoning them and the region as a whole. Sadly,
    this kind of bigotry has been allowed although it has been pointed
    out several times to high ranking US officials in both the White
    House and the State Department.

    It is imperative that US officials not allow this Turkish
    opprobrium; they need to live up to the founding fathers' principle of
    comprehensive human dignity, and not allow themselves to be infatuated
    with Turkey knowing its inhumane treatment of people and system
    and government. They should not continue to involve themselves in
    Turkish crimes against humanity by financing them as they have for
    more than half a century. They should tell their Turkish friends
    that Kurds are entitled to their sovereignty as much as they are,
    the Kurds will become a free nation at last, and they better start
    getting used to it. Moreover, they should not allow themselves to
    be bullied by vicious elements of the Turkish government that are
    attempting to manage our foreign policy. A line needs to be drawn
    between friendly relations and bullying, and justice and injustice.

    All this should be communicated to the Turkish authorities with great
    courage and supplication to humble them into descending from their
    high horse.

    Crushing the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK)

    Injustice does not bring fortune, nor is there immunity from it. At
    its best, humanity has always fought injustice. In Turkey, the Kurds
    have tried every peaceful means to secure their rights, yet their
    peaceful struggle has ever been refuted with acts of tyranny by the
    Turkish authorities: their leaders have been imprisoned, many have
    perished by barbaric torture, and many have fled to the mountains
    fearing for their lives. This is why the PKK was born, and this is
    why they resorted to an armed struggle. If Turkey had treated the
    Kurds with a sense of decency, the PKK would not exist.

    Against this backdrop, the State Department ignorantly and unfairly
    listed the PKK as a terror organization, ignoring the fact that the
    birth of the PKK was merely an effect of the brutality of Turks. The
    PKK is by far more peace-loving and civilized than the Turkish
    authorities. For proof, consider the fact that just recently for the
    fifth time they unilaterally declared a ceasefire, and pleaded for
    constructive dialogue.

    The response from Turkey was, "No dialogue."

    Turkey is trying to have America fight the PKK who found safe haven
    in Kurdistan in Iraq. Turkey has been fighting the PKK for nearly
    two decades without apparent success. Now they want America to assume
    their failing endeavor and engage in a bloody fight with the PKK. If
    America does that, they will alienate their only friend in the Islamic
    world, the Kurds, and cause further deterioration of the already
    fragile security of Iraq. It's about time for the Turkish hatred to
    relent; words of wisdom are needed from President Bush advising that
    peaceful dialogue should not be decapitated by the ignorant desire
    for violence. The Turks should be told that their abuse of human
    rights was the cause of what they now dread, and that now it's time
    for humility and humanity from Turks - dialogue, not violence.

    And of course, as always, begging for foreign aid and more weapons

    Every high official the Turks send to the US comes begging for
    foreign aid and more weapons. Indeed, Turkey, since America's rise
    as a world superpower after World War II, has been a welfare state
    thanks to America's sponsorship. Without it Turkey's economy would
    have remained as bruised as any third world country's; the US's
    generosity was rendered unconditionally. On the other hand, consider
    how the European Union dealt with Turkey - when Turkey applied for
    membership in the EU, they made Turkey's improved human rights toward
    Kurds and other minorities a precondition of their consideration.

    That was a right course of action, and brings up the question of why,
    for half a century, the US ignored all Turkey's human rights violations
    and let Turks use American monetary and military aid to advance their
    brutality against innocent civilians. Doesn't Washington understand
    that assisting these reactionary governments is a conscientious
    endorsement to further advance their atrocities against humanity,
    and what all this tells the world about America?

    Shouldn't the State Department, in an attempt to enhance America's
    standing regarding the promotion of human rights, deal with Turkey as
    the EU has? America should make it clear to the Turkish authorities
    that no more American aid is to be used for human atrocities and that
    Turkey will not receive any more aid at all unless it improves its
    human rights record in a verifiable fashion, just as the EU required.

    President Bush should not trivialize constructive dialogue between the
    PKK and Turkey. To this end, he should pressure the Turks politically
    and economically to straighten out their treatment of minorities'
    human rights, and to embark on the formation of a democratic system not
    benefiting Turks alone, but rather all citizens of Turkey. Indubitably,
    anyone who is familiar with Turkey cannot deny the magnitude of the
    suffering that has been inflicted upon Kurds, Assyrians and Armenians
    as a result of the misplaced American aid to Turkey. The remedy is
    long overdue and the time to right the wrong is now.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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