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KurdistanObserver.com
Turkey: Government Under Growing Pressure To
Meet Kurdish Demands
By Jean-Christophe Peuch
Aug 17, 2005
15 August marked the 21st anniversary of the
start of Turkey’s Kurdish insurgency. On 15 August 1984, suspected militants
from the Marxist Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), killed two police officers in
twin attacks in the Anatolian villages of Eruh and Semdinli. The killings marked
the start of a 15-year armed campaign for Kurdish self-determination. Following
a series of military setbacks and the 1999 capture of their leader, Abdullah
Ocalan, PKK militants declared a unilateral truce and sought refuge in Iraqi
Kurdistan. But citing Ankara’s refusal to suspend hostilities, the group in 2004
called off its cease-fire and reportedly resumed attacks against Turkish
targets. Regional experts say that while most Kurds would like the PKK to
renounce violence, the responsibility for establishing a lasting peace
ultimately falls to Ankara.
Prague, 17 August 2005 (RFE/RL) -- Turkish security forces accuse PKK rebels of
seeking to rekindle the deadly conflict that claimed some 35,000 lives – mostly
civilians -- between 1984 and 1999.
In the past few months, clashes between militants and government forces have
been reported in southeast Anatolia, where most of Turkey’s 12 million Kurds
live.
Violence has also hit non-Kurdish provinces, with recent deadly bombings taking
place in some of Turkey’s crowded resort areas.
Ankara unequivocally blames the PKK for this upsurge of violence.
Turkey’s powerful army generals warn that they have the means and ability to
crush any resurgence of Kurdish armed irredentism.
Yet they reject the possibility of unrest returning to 1990s levels, claiming
that the vast majority of Turkey’s Kurds stand behind the state and are -- in
the generals' words -- “tired of terrorism.”
Ankara has long maintained that the PKK does not enjoy support among the Kurds
and that separatism, or autonomy, does not appeal to its southeastern
populations.
Independent observers say it is the PKK's methods, rather than its political
agenda, that raise the most concern among Kurds.
Katrin Michael is an Iraqi Chaldean who fled her country in the 1990s and spent
months in a refugee camp in southeast Turkey before emigrating to the United
States. Michael, who now works with the Kurdish Human Rights Organization in
Washington, told RFE/RL Turkey’s Kurds have mixed feelings about the PKK.
“They have different opinions," Michael said. "Some people support [the PKK],
saying that they want to liberate themselves, that they want autonomy such as
[the Kurds] have in Iraq. But a lot of Kurds are very much against the actions
[undertaken by the PKK] against innocent people. They are against this, they
don’t like this.”
David McDowall, a prominent historian of the Kurdish separatist movement, told
our correspondent that although Kurds largely disapprove of the PKK's methods,
they nonetheless support the group.
“Most Kurds, actually, feel very, very frightened and disturbed by the PKK. Its
violence is pretty terrifying," McDowall said. "And the only reason why the
Kurds have, certainly during the 1990s, supported the PKK was that the Turkish
state forces were able to be equally terrifying to the Kurds. So they then said:
‘Blood is thicker than water and I’d stick with a devil that is a Kurdish devil,
rather than with a Turkish devil.’ It is basically for that reason that so many
people have given support to the PKK.”
Arguing that the Turkish army had mounted some 700 raids against its militants
during the cease-fire -- including in northern Iraq -- the PKK last year
officially resumed its armed struggle against Ankara's security forces.
The group says it is ready to lay down weapons once again -- as soon as Turkey
recognizes the rights of its Kurdish minority.
Pressed by the European Union, which it hopes to join within a few years, Ankara
has liberalized its legislation with a view to granting Kurds greater cultural
and social rights. But most of these legal changes have yet to be implemented.
Turkey has rejected dialogue with the PKK, which it considers a terrorist group.
It has also banned several pro-Kurdish parties for allegedly maintaining links
with the rebels.
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan on 12 August made a landmark visit
to eastern Anatolia’s main city of Diyarbakir. During the trip, he pledged to
solve the Kurdish problems “with more democracy and civil rights.”
Groups close to the PKK described this statement as “significant” but said they
wanted to see how it would translate into action.
David Morgan from the Kurdistan Solidarity Committee, a nongovernmental group
that lobbies for Kurdish rights in the British parliament, said he is rather
skeptical. Citing similar statements made by Turkish leaders in the past, he
said there is no guarantee Erdogan’s pledges will have any practical effect.
“Historically, Turkish leaders have gone to Diyarbakir to make such statements,"
Morgan said. "When Prime Minister Tansu Ciller made statements similar to that
[in the mid-1990s], saying that there should a ‘Basque solution’ to Kurdish
problems, it led to a further intensification of military action on the part of
the Turkish army. So it’s not clear what will happen. I think the Kurdish people
in the area are quite concerned that [Erdogan] made that statement; they're not
hopeful in that respect. It could be made to address the European audience.”
Meanwhile, the clock is ticking for Turkey. And not only because of the
approaching 3 October deadline for starting EU accession talks.
PKK officials blame the Kurdistan Freedom Falcons (TAK) for recent bomb attacks
in Istanbul and Turkey’s sea resorts. They say the TAK is a dissident group that
recognizes Ocalan as its leader, but not the authority of the PKK.
Turkish officials in turn say the TAK is just a cover for the PKK.
But McDowall said it is unclear what link exists between the two organizations.
He said he believes the Kurdish separatist movement might have split into
different subgroups, much as the Irish Republican Army did in the late 1990s.
“This is kind of symptomatic of these movements that use political violence
that, very often, a point comes where the mainstream decides that there is not
more to be [achieved from] the political violence and the time to find
alternative, diplomatic roots has now come and, therefore, they effectively
abandon using violence," McDowall said. "And always, there tends to be a
minority within the movement who break away because they are so wedded to the
idea of political violence that they find it almost impossible to think in any
terms, expect those of some kind of military victory – which tends to be pretty
unrealistic.”
Whoever bears responsibility for the recent bomb attacks, regional experts agree
that the solution to the Kurdish problem lies first and foremost in Turkey’s
hands.
McDowall said that despite its shortcomings and whatever support it may enjoy in
Anatolia, the PKK has, “for better or for worse,” succeeded in making Kurds
throughout the country aware of their ethnic identity.
He said any further delay by Ankara in recognizing the existence of its Kurdish
minority and relieving Anatolia's dire economic condition will inevitably lead
to new outbreaks of violence.
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