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Turkey: Twelve dead and hundreds injured in Kurdish protests
By Justus Leicht
6 April 2006
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During the past week, violent protests and demonstrations have
taken place in the predominantly Kurdish southeast of Turkey,
particularly in the regional metropolis of Diyarbakir. On Monday,
12 demonstrators were shot dead by security forces, including
three children. More than 300 people were injured, including over
100 policemen. Several hundred Kurds were arrested, and in Diyarbakir
and other southeastern cities, the Turkish army intervened with
armoured vehicles.
The protests erupted following the funeral last Tuesday of
14 members of the Kurdish nationalist guerrilla organisation,
the PKK (Kurdish Workers Party). The victims had been killed in
the course of a large-scale offensive by the Turkish army after
the traditional Kurdish Newroz festival. Kurdish nationalists
accused the army of using chemical weapons.
After the funeral, thousands of demonstrators set police cars
on fire and broke windows. On the following days attacks were
repeatedly launched against government buildings, the party offices
of the fascist MHP (Grey Wolves), and the governing Justice and
Development Party (AKP), as well as banks, private businesses
and vehicles. The police initially responded with tear gas, but
is alleged then to have shot into the crowd. One day later, army
tanks rolled into the city.
According to Osman Baydemir, the mayor of Diyarbakir and a
member of the legal Kurdish-nationalist DTP (Democratic
Turkey Party), more than 100 persons were treated in hospitals
last Wednesday with gunshot wounds. We have enough martyrs,
Baydemir said in an attempt to calm down the agitated crowd. He
criticised the lack of any peaceful solution of the Kurdish question.
On Thursday, he faced legal action because he had referred to
the courage of those protesting and had spoken of
martyrs. At the same time, the disturbances spread
to other cities in southeast Turkey.
On Thursday, the protests escalated at the funerals of demonstrators,
at which an estimated 100,000 participated. Once again, protesters
were killed. Children threw stones and incendiaries against tanks
and policemen who responded by shooting back. Three childrenaged
three, seven and nine yearswere killed by police bullets.
Nevertheless, government and the media praised the moderation
of the security forces.
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan of the moderate Islamic
AKP had been violently criticised by Turkish nationalists one
year ago because he acknowledged the existence
of a Kurdish problem, which he said should be solved
with increased democracy and pluralism. Erdogan has now reacted
to criticism with a sharp lurch to the right. He praised the security
forces, condemned the words used by Baydemir and even justified
the shooting of children.
Erdogan warned parents against leaving their children on the
streets during demonstrations. If you cry tomorrow, it will
be in vain, Anadolu News Agency quoted
him as saying. The security forces will intervene against
the pawns of terrorism, no matter if they are children or women.
Everybody should realise that.
In Istanbul, an obscure group naming itself the Kurdistan Liberation
Hawks (TAK) carried out a bomb attack. A poor street vendor was
killed and several persons injured. The TAK, whose links to the
PKK remain unclear, pointed to the force used by the state in
the southeast to justify this act of terrorism against innocent
civilians. Three people were killed in Istanbul late Sunday after
being struck by a bus that had been attacked by a group of men
throwing Molotov cocktails. The three, including two elderly women,
died when the driver of a bus in Istanbuls Bagcilar district
reversed his vehicle after fire bombs were thrown through the
windows by a group of unidentified assailants. According to press
reports, following the attack a group gathered chanting slogans
in support of the PKK.
The Turkish press has uniformly held the PKK responsible for
the protests. While this is possible, it neither justifies the
brutality of the security forces nor explains why those protesting
enjoy such broad popular support. In fact, the social situation
for large masses of Kurdish workers and poor farmers in southeast
Turkey has not improved in recent years. The free market
economic reforms introduced by the Erdogan government at the behest
of the European Union and IMF have resulted in some economic growth,
but this in turn has done little to relieve poverty amongst the
Kurdish peasant community.
There has also been little improvement for the Kurdish community
with regard to cultural rights. Kurdish private television began
its first transmissions just last week. A Kurdish language programme
is restricted to just one hour a day and must either be translated
or accompanied by Turkish subtitles. This represents no competition
to Roj TV, a satellite transmitter from Denmark, which is alleged
to have called for the recent protests and has links to the PKK.
The Turkish government has reacted by calling upon Denmark to
close down Roj TV.
The real forces predominating in the Turkish establishment
when it comes to the Kurdish question were revealed recently in
connection with the Semdinli affair. Last year, Turkish soldiers
were implicated in a bomb attack in the southeast Anatolian city
of Semdinli, and the local public prosecutor, Ferhat Sarikaya,
subsequently requested the indictment of several high-ranking
officers.
At the time of the Newroz festival, the Turkish general staff
then officially refused to agree to allow proceedings against
the head of Turkish ground forces, Yasar Büyükanit,
claiming that the public prosecutor had exceeded his powers.
The proceedings were without any basis and deliberately
introduced to damage the reputation of the Turkish armed forces.
According to Turkish law, it is now no longer possible to try
Büyükanit.
Last week, it also became clear that no action would be taken
against the other accused officers. Instead, a preliminary investigation
against public prosecutor Sarikaya is to be undertaken. The head
of the police intelligence department, Sabri Uzun, who had testified
over the Semidinli incident to a parliamentary committee of inquiry,
was relieved of his post. When asked why, prior to the Semdinli
attack, his department had not received information about the
rising number of bomb attacks in the region, Uzun answered curtly,
If the thief is already in the house, then locks are no
good.
The American government immediately issued a statement condemning
the PKK for terrorism and backing the hard line taken by the Turkish
government and military against Kurdish demonstrators. The
United States condemns the bombings by the Kurdistan Workers Party
(PKK) that killed four people in Istanbul over the weekend. The
United States also regrets the loss of life as a result of violent
protests by PKK sympathisers in southeast Turkey and in Istanbul.
Turkey is a valued ally and close friend of the United States,
and we stand together in our quest for regional stability and
democratic reform. The United States calls on all parties to exercise
restraint. We reiterate our strong condemnation of all terrorist
groups, including the PKK. It is important to condemn this violence
and stand against terrorists and their supporters.
For its part, the PKK is evidently seeking to use the protests
to strengthen its negotiating position for an agreement with the
Turkish state and is calling upon the European Union to intervene.
In a statement last Tuesday, the party declared: Although
the Kurdish people have made clear at every opportunity their
readiness for a democratic and peaceful solution and have suffered
many casualties during past years the Turkish state has repeatedly
maintained its provocative stance. The PKK calls upon the
European Union, and in particular the federal government of Germany,
to categorically condemn the violence used by Turkey against the
Kurds and propose concrete solutions.... [W]e call upon the European
Union to recognise their historical responsibility and open the
way to dialogue on a solution of the Kurdish question, as it has
done in the cases of Ireland and the Basque country.
See Also:
Turkey: public prosecutor
accuses general of involvement in terrorist attacks
[21 March 2006]
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