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KurdistanObserver.com
Kurdish Conference Opens In Turkey Under Tight
Security
ISTANBUL, March 11, 2006 (AFP) - Turkish and Kurdish intellectuals
gathered here Saturday under tight security for a major conference to discuss a
peaceful resolution to the 22-year-old Kurdish conflict in the country's
southeast.
Police imposed strict security measures after nationalists threatened to disrupt
the two-day event, designed to promote ways of ending a conflict that has long
impeded Turkey's efforts to join the European Union.
Officers searched participants at the entrance of the venue, the private Bilgi
University, and several dozen riot police were on guard outside the campus.
More than 45 Turkish and Kurdish intellectuals, politicians and journalists of
various political convictions were taking part in the conference, entitled "The
Kurdish question in Turkey: ways for a democratic settlement".
Organizers said the conference could adopt a final declaration on Sunday,
appealing to the government for more reforms to resolve the conflict, which has
claimed some 37,000 lives since the rebel Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) began
fighting for self-rule in the mainly Kurdish southeast in 1984.
The conflict has led to allegations of gross human rights violations on both
sides, ravaged the already meager economy of the region and forced hundreds of
thousands of already poor peasants to migrate into urban slum areas.
A period of relative calm in the region was shattered in June 2004 when the PKK,
blacklisted as a terrorist group by Turkey, the EU and the United States, called
off a five-year unilateral ceasefire with the army.
Since then, Kurdish militants have also carried out deadly bombings targeting
civilians in western Turkey.
Speakers at the conference acknowledged significant progress in improving the
rights of the Kurds, driven by Turkey's EU membership aspirations, but said more
reforms were needed to fully guarantee the minority's cultural and political
freedoms.
Many urged the PKK to lay down its arms.
"Some bans (on Kurdish rights) have been lifted, but the essence of the problem
is still there," former culture minister Ercan Karakas said.
"The Kurdish question is a question of democracy... The government only makes
promises that lead to nowhere."
Ankara has in recent years lifted emergency rule in the southeast and allowed
the Kurdish language to be taught at private courses and used in television and
radio broadcasts.
It is also compensating villagers who have been displaced and suffered material
losses during the conflict.
Activists, however, maintain that the reforms were half-hearted moves undertaken
under EU pressure and are calling for bolder steps, including a general amnesty
for PKK militants.
In a landmark speech in August 2005, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
promised that the Kurdish conflict would be resolved with "more democracy". But
the government has since failed to introduce any concrete measures and PKK
militants have intensified their attacks.
"There is a crisis of confidence between the two sides," Kurdish rights
campaigner Sertac Bucak said. "There is a Kurdish phobia in Turkey."
He argued that the ultimate solution lay in a federal settlement that would
grant the Kurds autonomy.
"There are also things the Kurds must do," Bucak said. "The PKK should
unconditionally renounce violence because violence breeds violence and plays
into the hands of those who favour the status quo."
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