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KurdistanObserver.com
Turkey's Kurds
Yearn For Official Status For Their Language
ISTANBUL, Turkey, March 13, 2006 (AFP) -
Turkey's Kurds on Sunday complained of police oppression and called for an end
to prejudice against their language as crucial steps towards ending a
22-year-old conflict in the southeast of the country.
As a two-day conference on the conflict wrapped up,
Kurds called on the government, which wants to take Turkey into the European
Union, to make Kurdish an official language.
Popular Kurdish singer Nilufer Akbal pleaded for an end
to prejudices against her language, which linger even though singing in Kurdish
has been allowed in Turkey since the early 1990s.
"I have always been 'the other', the one who is
different" from Turks, Akbal, who has a wide fan base in mainly Kurdish
southeastern Turkey, told the conference.
"When I tell people that I am involved in Kurdish music,
they look at me in a strange way, as if I am a terrorist," the official jargon
for the outlawed separatist Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), which has been
fighting the Ankara government since 1984, Akbal said.
Like other Kurdish artists, she also complained of
police oppression.
"The police keep tabs on Kurdish artists. Whenever we
are to give a concert, we are required to get official documents from the
prosecutor's office to prove that we do not have a criminal record," Akbal said.
Turkey, which began membership talks with the European
Union in October, allowed Kurdish to be taught in private language courses and
spoken in state television and radio broadcasts in 2003 as part of a major refom
drive to ease its entry into the bloc.
But Turkey's Kurdish community, estimated at about 12
million in a population of some 70 million, say the reforms were not enough and
are calling on the government to give their language an official status.
Turkey's constitution recognises Turkish as the sole
official language of the country and bans any other language from being used in
state institutions and official affairs.
Last week, Turkey's main pro-Kurdish party, The
Democratic Society Party (DTP), urged the government to make Kurdish an official
language, a demand that has fallen on deaf ears.
"We insist that the Kurdish language be taught in
schools and be given an official status," DTP deputy chairman and former Kurdish
lawmaker Ahmet Turk told the conference.
Several private centers teaching Kurdish opened across
southeastern provinces after Ankara introduced the EU-driven language reform,
but all have since closed down due to a lack of interest and financial problems.
"The Kurdish language does not have any social
prestige," said Salih Akin, a Kurdish academic from Rouen University in France
who has done research on the Kurdish language.
"People know that they cannot use it (Kurdish) in state
institutions and in commerce but only at home, and thus do not send their
children to private courses teaching the language," he said.
Akin said the Turkish government should amend the
constitution in order to make Kurdish the "second official language" of Turkey.
But observers say such a move is unlikely while the PKK,
blacklisted by Turkey, the United States and the European Union, does not
abandon its armed struggle.
About 37,000 people have been killed since the PKK took
up arms for self-rule in the country's southeast.
A period of relative calm in the region was shattered in
June 2004 when the rebels 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. |