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Human Rights Watch
slams Turkey for failing to help Kurds go home
Turkey Fails
Displaced Villagers
International donors shun government's defective return plans
(Istanbul, October
30, 2002) The Turkish government, security forces and paramilitaries are
obstructing the return of hundreds of thousands of displaced villagers to their
homes in the formerly war-torn southeast, a US based Human Rights Watch said in a
new report released today.
Human Rights Watch
called on the Turkish government to engage with relevant international and
nongovernmental organizations to develop and finance a new comprehensive return
plan in line with international standards.
"This human
rights problem directly affects more people in Turkey than any other single
human rights issue," said Human Rights Watch Turkey researcher Jonathan
Sugden. "But the international community is unlikely to lend resources and
expertise to the effort until the government produces a transparent plan that
effectively protects and meets the needs of the displaced."
The 78-page report,
entitled Displaced and
Disregarded: Turkey's Failing Village Return Program, documents the
plight of mainly Kurdish villagers forced to flee their villages in southeastern
Turkey during the 15-year conflict waged between the illegal, armed Kurdish
Workers' Party (PKK) and Turkish government forces.
Estimates of the
number of displaced people range from 380,000 to 1,000,000, most of whom were
forced out of their homes by Turkish security forces and paramilitary village
guards determined to deprive the PKK of access to food, shelter and recruits.
Human Rights Watch
interviewed dozens of displaced villagers who longed to return home and escape
cramped and impoverished lives in unfamiliar urban surroundings. But although
active hostilities ceased in 1999, it appears that no more than ten percent have
ventured home. Human Rights Watch identified a range of factors blocking return,
from inadequate government assistance to continued violence by Turkish security
forces and their paramilitaries.
Many villages remain
off-limits, with local or regional authorities forbidding return. In other
cases, return is officially permitted, but returning villagers are greeted with
harassment, detention and attacks by the gendarmerie and village guards. Some
have been forced to flee a second time. Return under current circumstances is a
major gamble for villagers, with serious personal and financial risks.
A displaced villager
from Mardin working as a taxi-driver in Istanbul asked: "If the villagers
go back now, what is the guarantee that they won't get turned out again in a
year's time-and perhaps with violence? More than help in returning or permission
to return, our villagers are looking for guarantees of safety."
The Turkish
authorities appear intent on limiting villagers' recourse to courts to enforce
their rights. In recent years, Turkey has faced a growing number of lawsuits
before the European Court of Human Rights, which has ordered that the Turkish
government compensate displaced villagers for their losses. Many villagers told
Human Rights Watch that the authorities would give them permission to return
only if they signed statements absolving the government of responsibility for
their original displacement. Villagers also find it nearly impossible to get any
official written statement from the authorities either granting or denying their
right to return. Human Rights Watch said the authorities seem determined to
avoid creating a paper trail that may end up in court.
Human Rights Watch
said the government's much-heralded return programs are under-funded and ill
conceived, falling far short of established international standards.
"The empty
promises and inaction are wearing villagers down," said Sugden.
The Village Return
and Rehabilitation Project announced in March 1999 has yielded nothing more than
a feasibility study for return to 12 model villages, as yet unpublished. Other
programs appear designed to prioritize return for villages controlled by village
guards or to resettle villagers in central villages, often impractically distant
from the villagers' agricultural lands.
Human Rights Watch
noted that the Turkish government's defective return plans have failed to
attract backing from international donors that have pledged billions in aid for
return of the displaced and reconstruction in other post-conflict settings, such
as Bosnia and Kosovo.
"The
government's schemes don't meet international standards, so they haven't
received international funding," Sugden said. "Instead of helping
villagers get assistance from development organizations, the government is
standing in their path."
The government's
return programs also suffer from a lack of transparency. The government has
reportedly come to a secret agreement with the army about the future of the
region. Yet it has failed to consult with civil society groups, including
professional organizations with relevant expertise. Human Rights Watch was
unable to obtain from any government official any written description of the
Return to Village and Rehabilitation Project, or any of the other return
programs. Officials in the Office of the Prime Minister responsible for the
programs declined to meet with Human Rights Watch researchers and failed to
respond to written requests for information.
To address the
problem of the displaced, Human Rights Watch urged the Turkish government to
take a number of steps, including:
- As an urgent
priority, set up a planning forum with representatives of governmental,
nongovernmental and intergovernmental organizations with relevant expertise,
as well as representatives of displaced villagers, to develop a
comprehensive plan for the safe return of displaced villagers to their
homes, in accordance with the U.N. Guiding Principles on Internal
Displacement.
- Permit villagers
to return to their own homes unless there are legitimate security reasons to
prevent this, such as continued armed conflict or the presence of landmines
that would endanger civilian lives.
- Take measures at
all levels of government to stop the harassment of internally displaced
persons, the recently returned, and those who assist them.
- Abolish the
village guard system.
- Ensure that
infrastructure for villages and hamlets is restored at least to the standard
prior to their destruction and evacuation, at state cost.
- Publish
comprehensive information about the progress of returns, including a
verifiable list of communities that have returned and the names of villages
open for return or temporarily closed to return.
Human Rights Watch
also urged governments and funding agencies to promote this agenda with the
Turkish government and to commit resources to fund return plans that comply with
international standards.
The following are
excerpts of witness testimony contained in the Human Rights Watch report:
A villager burned
out of his home in Diyarbakir province in 1993 told Human Rights Watch:
This year we
wanted to go back. Some villagers have gone back. The authorities said to them
you are going to have to sign a form. They had to fill in the form saying that
the village was burned by the PKK. The local governor said to us, "If you
say the government did it, we will not let you go back." We said,
"If that is the condition, we will not fill in the form. Why should we
lie?"
- Human Rights Watch interview, Diyarbakir, June 22, 2001.
A villager forcibly
displaced from his home in Siirt province in 1995 told Human Rights Watch:
At the moment it
would be impossible for me to go back because the most low ranked soldier or
village guard can kick me about and there is nothing I can do about it. I went
and applied to the gendarmerie for permission to gather fruit. You can see our
village from the road. The master sergeant said I could tend the trees but
added, "Do not look at your village when you pass, just walk straight
on." It is our custom to visit our parents' graves on festivals, but we
have not been able to do this since the village was burned.
- Human Rights Watch interview, Siirt, June 27, 2001.
One villager who was
shot and nearly killed when he returned to his village in Diyarbakir province in
2001 told Human Rights Watch:
We are not going
to go back to our village while there is this serious threat. Not while there
are village guards. These people are former neighbors of mine-and some of the
village guards I even considered friends.… If the village guard system is
abolished we will go home. As soon as there is peace we will return.
-Human Rights Watch interview, Diyarbakir, June 23, 2001.
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