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KurdistanObserver.com
Ocalan Says No Possibility Of Fair Retrial In Turkey
ANKARA, June 3 (AFP) Jailed Kurdish rebel
leader Abdullah Ocalan does not want to be retried in Turkey, where he believes
he cannot be judged fairly, one of his attorneys told AFP Friday.
"My client does not want to be retried in Turkey. He does not want to be
judged under the current circumstances," said Aysel Tugluk, who met with Ocalan
Wednesday in the island prison of Imrali, where he is serving a life sentence
for treason.
Last month the European court of Human Rights ruled that the Kurdish leader
should be retried on grounds that his 1999 trial, in which he was sentenced to
death for treason, was unfair. That sentenced was commuted to life in prison in
2002.
Turkish authorities said they would abide by the European court ruling.
But in order for a new trial to take place Ocalan must request it and he has
refused to do so on grounds he would not receive a fair trial in Turkey, Tugluk
said.
"Ocalan has said that he refuses to play the main role in a play orchestrated
by Turkey," she added, pointing out that Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul had said
that the Kurdish leader was likely to receive the same sentence if judged "100
times".
Tugluk said Ocalan would like a retrial to take place outside of Turkey and
under the auspices of a special tribunal set up by the Council of Europe. That
court could be similar to the one in The Hague which is currently judging former
Yugoslav strongman Slobodan Milosevic.
Ocalan's PKK led a bloody armed campaign for Kurdish self-rule in the mainly
Kurdish southeast between 1984 and 1999 before announcing a unilateral ceasefire
to facilitate a peaceful resolution to the conflict.
The group called off the truce last year on the grounds that democratic
reforms undertaken by Ankara to expand Kurdish rights were insufficient. |