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KurdistanObserver.com
Turkey: Hollow Promises for Kurds Displaced by Army
Mar 7, 2005
Source: Human Rights Watch
From
Reuters
(Ankara, March 7, 2005) - On a key benchmark for European Union membership,
the Turkish government has failed to honor pledges to help 378,000 displaced
people, mainly Kurds, return home more than a decade after the army forced them
from their villages in southeastern Turkey, Human Rights Watch said in a
report released today.
On March 7-8, the European Union's commissioner for enlargement, Olli Rehn, and
a delegation of other high-level EU officials will visit Ankara to discuss
Turkey's membership. The EU officials should press Turkey to take effective
steps to facilitate the return of the internally displaced persons (IDPs) to
southeastern Turkey, where Turkish security forces expelled hundreds of
thousands from their villages during an internal armed conflict that raged
during the 1980s and 1990s.
The 37-page report, "Still
Critical: Prospects in 2005 for Internally Displaced Kurds in Turkey,"
details how the Turkish government has failed to implement measures for IDPs the
United Nations recommended nearly three years ago. Since the European Union
confirmed Turkey's membership candidacy in December, the Turkish government
appears to have shelved plans to enact those measures.
The report also details how Turkey has overstated its progress on internal
displacement in reports to the European Commission. Before the European Union
announced its decision to open membership talks, the Turkish government sent the
European Commission statistics suggesting that the problem was well on its way
to a solution-a requirement Turkey must fulfill for full membership. Turkey
claimed that a third of the displaced had already returned, but Human Rights
Watch revealed that permanent returns in some places were less than a fifth of
the government's estimate.
"When we checked Turkey's figures on helping the displaced return home, the
numbers proved unreliable," said Rachel Denber, acting executive director of
Human Rights Watch's Europe and Central Asia Division. "Also, the bare figures
don't convey how, thanks to government inaction, villagers are returning to
places that are practically uninhabitable."
In southeastern Turkey, the government has failed to provide infrastructure
such as electricity, telephone lines and schools to returning communities, and
has not provided proper assistance with house reconstruction.
"What's worse, the government's paramilitary village guards are attacking and
killing returnees in some parts of southeastern Turkey," added Denber.
Numerous intergovernmental bodies, as well as Turkish parliamentary
commissions, have condemned the village guard system, which was devised in the
1980s to combat the illegal armed Kurdish Workers' Party (PKK, now known as
Kongra Gel). More than 58,000 paramilitary village guards remain on the
government payroll.
Human Rights Watch said that the government's paramilitary guards have killed
11 returned villagers in southeastern Turkey in the past three years.
When the United Nations examined the plight of the displaced in Turkey in
2002, it recommended that the government establish a dedicated IDP unit, develop
a partnership with the international community for the resolution of IDP
problems, and provide compensation for the damages arising from the
displacement. Nearly three years later, the Turkish government has established
no joint projects with intergovernmental organizations, and there is still no
central governmental office responsible for IDPs. Last year, the Turkish
parliament passed a compensation law, but no payments have yet been made.
It is now 18 years since Human Rights Watch warned of the impending program
of village destruction in a 1987 report during the conflict in southeastern
Turkey. The Turkish army duly carried out its campaign with considerable
violence, torturing, "disappearing" and extrajudicially executing villagers in
the process. Human Rights Watch has since repeatedly criticized the Turkish
government's empty gestures in its return programs, issuing further reports in
1995 and 2002.
"The Turkish state tried to cover up what it did, and now it's subjecting the
displaced to years of delay," said Denber. "When EU officials arrive in Ankara,
they need to put the problem of the displaced at the top of their agenda."
Human Rights Watch called on the European Union to press the Turkish
government to move ahead by immediately approving an IDP project submitted last
year by the United Nations Development Program. In addition, Ankara needs to
establish an agency for IDPs that will take effective measures.
Since the European Union accepted Turkey's membership candidacy in 1999,
human rights reform has been a stop-start process in the country. Turkey still
has much to do on the protection of freedom of expression, freedom of religion,
language rights and protection against torture.
"The predicament of the displaced is the most pressing concern, but the
Turkish government has lost focus on its reform task as a whole," Denber noted.
"Last week we had three delegates observing trials of Ragip Zarakolu and Fikret
Baskaya, a publisher and a professor threatened with imprisonment for expressing
their nonviolent opinions."
Preventing torture is another area where the Turkish government seems to have
run out of energy. Turkey has made substantial improvement in recent years, but
in order to combat persistent incidents of torture and ill-treatment, the
European Union recommended in October 2004 that the Turkish government establish
independent monitoring of detention facilities. Five months later, Turkey has
still not implemented independent monitoring, even though the necessary legal
mechanisms are already in place.
In 2000, the European Union presented Turkey with a list of benchmarks-known
as the Accession Partnership-that Turkey had to meet to become a full member.
This was revised in 2003, and will be revised again later this year.
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