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Turkey: Brink of Civil War: Civilian Casualties Soar in Turkish Assault on Kurds

December 30, 2015 By administrator

1032352472The death toll among civilians has surged as Turkish security forces continue a large-scale operation against Kurdish rebels in southeastern Turkey, shattering the last hopes to conclude a truce between the opposing sides

Government forces have killed over 150 civilians and at least 200 Kurdish insurgents within the last week, according to human rights groups and local officials, cited by the New York Times. Amid escalating fighting across southeastern Turkey, hundreds of thousands of residents have abandoned their homes for safer regions.

“What people here in the west [of Turkey] do not realize is that we are one step away from a civil war,” Engin Gur, a resident of the Turkish South East who moved to Istanbul, told the New York Times.

The frozen conflict between state authorities and the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) reignited last July following the failure of a two-year ceasefire agreement.

Many experts observed that Turkish President Erdogan initially aimed to use the Kurdish conflict as a tool to strengthen the position of his Justice and Development Party (AKP), and consolidate the nation around its leader in the run up to parliamentary elections in November.

As soon as AKP won the elections by a large margin, the violence erupted.

Erdogan promised to eradicate the PKK, claiming that the group is the primary enemy of Turkey in spite of significant military achievements by the Kurds in Syria, including territorial gains that are aligned with the stated policies of Ankara.

“You will be annihilated in those houses, those buildings, those ditches which you have dug,” Erdogan pronounced, referring to trenches made by rebels in many southeastern cities. “Our security forces will continue this fight until it has been completely cleansed and a peaceful atmosphere established.”

At the same time Ankara officially claims it seeks a political settlement to the conflict. Once the military operation is finished, authorities state, talks with Kurds will be resumed.

It’s unknown who would take part in those negotiations on behalf of Kurds. Ankara has ruled out talking with the leader of pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) Selahattin Demirtas following his calls for Kurdish self-rule in the southeast of the country.

According to the New York Times, the most probable candidate for the role of Kurdish diplomat is jailed rebel leader Abdullah Ocalan.

“They do not want to deal with the legitimate political actors, that is, the HDP or the PKK leadership directly,” Asli Aydintasbas, a fellow at the European Council on Foreign Relations, said, commenting on the stance of Turkish officials in the Kurdish conflict.

Aydintasbas added that Ocalan will likely demand a “form of self-rule or autonomy” for the Kurdish population.

As a result of the recent conflict, many settlements in southeastern Turkey have no electricity and many citizens are trapped in their houses with no food, according to the New York Times. Scarce reports from those regions say that once densely populated areas now resemble war zones similar to those of Syria and Iraq.

“The tanks fire all day and we have nowhere left to hide,” Nurettin Kurtay, a resident of Turkey’s southeastern province of Sirnak told the New York Times by phone.

#Turkey call PKK Terrorist, well these are not terrorist it is 20 Million Kurd Uprising Against Turkish occupation pic.twitter.com/s7s3sym3fH

— Wally Sarkeesian (@gagrulenet) December 30, 2015

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Al-Qaeda Claims Iraq Kurd Attack, brink, civil, Kurd, Turkey, war

Turkey: Kurdish HDP party co-chair faces probe for defending ‘autonomy’

December 30, 2015 By administrator

AA photo

AA photo

DİYARBAKIR,

The Diyarbakır Chief Public Prosecutor’s Office has opened an investigation against Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) co-chair Figen Yüksekdağ over her remarks defending autonomy, a day after the party’s other co-chair, Selahattin Demirtaş, was notified of a probe against him over crimes against the constitutional order.

Yüksekdağ attended a meeting of the Democratic Society Congress (DTK) held in southeastern Diyarbakır province between Dec. 26 and 27, where the establishment of “democratic autonomous regions” was presented as a solution to the Kurdish problem.

The attendees also asked for “self-governance” and embraced the “legitimate insurgency” in a number of southeastern districts, while also urging the people of Turkey to support their cause.

According to Turkey’s state-run Anadolu Agency, the prosecutor’s office examined videos of the convention and initiated an investigation against Yüksekdağ and Socialist Party of the Oppressed (ESP) head Sultan Ulusoy over their remarks on “self-governance, autonomy, trenches and barricades.”

The grounds for the investigations were laid out as “making terrorism propaganda,” “inciting a crime” and “encouraging sedition,” in addition to violating Article 302 of the Turkish Penal Code (TCK) by “disrupting the unity and territorial integrity of the state.”

Since Yüksekdağ is currently a MP, a summary of the proceedings needs to be prepared to lift the HDP co-chair’s immunity.

When asked to comment on the probe, Yüksekdağ told reporters that such investigations against HDP deputies and co-chairs were quite common.

“We never enjoyed immunity. We continue to exercise politics despite attacks and pressures,” Yüksekdağ was quoted as saying by Cihan News Agency.

The co-chair was also asked to comment on whether the DTK’s declaration constituted a violation of Turkey’s constitution, to which she responded by arguing it was an anomaly to expect to have a discussion on ways to improve the constitution without actually criticizing its contents.

“To the contrary, Turkish politicians have been discussing a new constitution. How can we lead a proper discussion on this issue without criticizing the current constitution?” she asked.

According to reports by Cihan, Yüksekdağ also pointed the finger at previous remarks by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan when he said his election to the post of Presidency constituted a “de facto change in the system of administration.”

“If they are talking of violating the constitution they should consider the president’s ‘de facto regime change’ remarks,” she said.

December/30/2015

Source: hurriyetdailynews

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: autonomy, Kurd, Turkey

Kurd Liberation is just a matter of Time Protests Resume in Turkey Amid Ankara’s Assault on Kurds

December 29, 2015 By administrator

1032352472Several pro-Kurdish organizations criticizing Ankara over “aggressive policies” took to the streets in Turkish cities and called on the authorities to stop violence against the the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) in southeastern regions of the country.

A few days ago, Ankara started anti-terrorist operations in southeastern Turkey, predominantly populated by the Kurds. The operation involved 10,000 military and police forces.

Tanks and armored vehicles deployed by the central government created unbearable conditions for the local population. As result of the offensive, over 200 Kurdish militants were killed, while more than 200,000 Kurds are fleeing Turkey amid increased violence.

During the rally, the activists demanded that the Turkish authorities stop their aggression. They fear that the Ankara government can put the country on the brink of a civil war and accused the army of acting with indiscriminate impunity.

The Ankara government and the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) have been involved in an exhausting conflict since 1984 when the Kurds first declared an insurgency in Turkey to create an independent Kurdish state.

The group continues to work for regional autonomy and ordinary citizens’ rights for Kurds, but is being viewed by the central government as a rebel and terrorist organization. 

The current “anti-terrorist” operation indicates a new stage in the long-lasting standoff between Turkish President Erdogan’s authority and the PKK, after a two-year truce between the conflicting parties collapsed in July.

https://youtu.be/iPlfFYi9jM0

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Kurd, Protests Resume, Turkey

Turkey’s Erdogan: Demirtas Kurdish autonomy plea is ‘treason’

December 29, 2015 By administrator

erd.thumbTurkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has condemned as “treason” a call by prominent Kurdish politician Selahattin Demirtas for Kurdish autonomy.

“What the co-leader has done is treason, provocation,” Mr Erdogan said, referring to Mr Demirtas, co-leader of the Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP).

At the weekend the HDP and other pro-Kurdish groups called for self-rule in Turkey’s mainly Kurdish south-east.

Turkish prosecutors have launched an investigation into those comments.

The Turkish military has stepped up operations against the rebel Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), which is fighting for Kurdish self-rule. The army says it has killed more than 200 PKK militants in the latest fighting.

The PKK is regarded as a “terrorist” organisation by Turkey, the US and EU.

‘Challenging the constitution’

The HDP won 59 seats in Turkey’s 550-seat parliament in the 1 November elections. It came third, behind Mr Erdogan’s Justice and Development Party (AKP) and the Republican People’s Party (CHP).

Speaking on Tuesday, Mr Erdogan said Mr Demirtas and other Kurdish leaders would be “taught a lesson” by the people and the law.

He accused Mr Demirtas of challenging Article 14 of the constitution, which bans activities deemed to “violate the indivisible integrity of the state”.

On Sunday Mr Demirtas backed a declaration by a Kurdish umbrella group – the Democratic Society Congress (DTK) – which called for “autonomous regions” and “self-governance bodies”.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Erdogan, Kurd, treason, Turkey

Kurdish freedom Fighters PKK wounded 9 Turkish security officers in clashes in Sur

December 28, 2015 By administrator

Five police officers and four soldiers were wounded on Monday in clashes with the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) in the southeastern district of Sur, which is currently under curfew.

According to the Doğan news agency, PKK members detonated two handmade explosives via remote control that they had planted on Monday morning in the district. Following the violent explosion, fighting erupted between security forces and PKK terrorists.

Five special operations police officers and four gendarmerie special operations members were wounded during the clash. The injured soldiers and police officers were taken to nearby hospitals. One police officer who sustained gunshot wounds and a soldier hit by shrapnel were taken into surgery. The injured security officers are reportedly in good health.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Kurd, PKK, Turkey, wounded

The Call of alarmist denouncing a Kurd ethnic cleansing in Turkey

December 28, 2015 By administrator

arton120362-480x347Corroborating the statements of the Turkish historian Ayse Hür, a young French woman living in Istanbul, urgently calls on the imminent danger of ethnic cleansing involving the Kurdish people, perpetrated on the orders of the Turkish authorities. In fact the only images broadcast by Haber TV sparingly, speak for themselves. While the eyes of the international community have turned to Syria and Iraq, Turkey proceeds methodically to silence Kurdish ambitions.

Here is the text addressed to the UN:

“Imagine a district of Lyon or Rennes reduced to ashes by the French army itself. Imagine, teachers receive a text message announcing the Ministry all schools in unlimited vacation and summoning you to leave your city, Nantes and Valencia, in preparation for a massacre by the army. Imagine that no relays these atrocities and that the vast majority of the country, lobotomized by state TV and intoxicated by nationalist hatred think it is a legitimate war against “terror” and welcomes the dead, “dirty terrorist” and less.

Well that is what is happening now in Turkey, in its eastern part, among the Kurds. That’s what state is the neighborhood of Sur in Diyarbakir (Turkey). Teachers Cizre were ordered to leave the premises, hospitals were sent indicating “be ready the equipment and personnel.” A massacre of State is preparing to general indifference. And all this policy is supported by the Western powers, our governments … “When I think that I was walking again in these streets a few months ago .. When I see what’s left … And it just beginning. Friends, I know that Kurdistan is far from being the only place or are happening such injustices but right now, battery hundred years after the Armenian Genocide, a real ethnic cleansing is preparing under the orders of President Erdoğan (supported by our own government in most of his actions!), in general indifference and impotence of many. Life in the cities of the West seems to continue as if nothing had happened, no news on most channels controlled by the state (the other censored) or even more absurd lies of the government. Here it seems that the people’s opinion has no weight but may be that in France you can make things happen .. disseminate, organize support visible movements etc .. to prevent further genocide in any country close to home, in 2015 “

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Ethnic Cleansing, Kurd, Turkey

Kurds uprise demand autonomy in Turkey amid continuing crackdown

December 28, 2015 By administrator

f568127c8a314a_568127c8a3181.thumbA congress of Kurdish non-governmental organizations has called to grant autonomy to Turkey’s southeastern regions via constitutional reform, as Turkish forces continue their crackdown on the Kurds, Russia Today reported.

On Sunday, the Democratic Society Congress (DTK), an association of Kurdish non-governmental organizations, adopted a declaration stressing the need for Kurdish self-rule in Turkey after a two-day special meeting in Turkey’s southeastern city of Diyarbakir.

“The rightful resistance mounted by our people against the policies that degrade the Kurdish problem, is essentially a demand and struggle for local self-governance and local democracy,” the 14-article declaration said.

The document suggests the creation of autonomous regions on Turkey’s territories mainly inhabited by Kurds, which could be composed of one or several Turkish provinces.

The autonomous regions should have their own elected legislatures and governments. Central government should have no power to remove the elected members of these bodies. Additionally, the regions should also have their own security forces under control of the regional authorities.

The DTK declaration also stresses that an autonomous region should receive a share from the use of natural resources located on its territory, and says constitutional reform is needed to formalize these norms in legislation.

The congress emphasized that granting autonomy is the only way for both to ensure the democratization of Turkey and to resolve the Kurdish issue in Turkey, adding that Kurds will not stop fighting for self-rule.

“We are extending our hand [for a peaceful settlement of the Kurdish issue] for the last time. We will not give up [demanding] autonomy,” Selma Irmak, a co-chair of the DTK said, delivering a speech on the first day of the Congress, Today’s Zaman reports.
The Congress expressed its commitment to the peaceful settlement of the Kurdish issue calling for reopening dialog and re-launching negotiations. It also reiterated its call for the release of Abdullah Ocalan – the leader of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK).
The co-chair of the pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP), Selahattin Demirtas, said Kurds may potentially not only have autonomous regions, but also an independent federal state in the future. In his speech at the Congress on Saturday, he said the 21st century would be the “century of the Kurds.”

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan ruled out any possibility of another state within Turkey’s borders.

“Now they are talking about separating our land in this country. We will never allow surgery on the unity of our country,” he said on Saturday as quoted by Reuters.
Also on Saturday, Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu canceled a scheduled meeting with the HDP and accused the party of seeking “polarization in the country.” The PM was reacting to HDP politicians’ recent statements, in which they criticized the government’s crackdown on Kurds and demanded its cessation before any meeting between the HDP and the government could take place.
Turkey’ security operation in the country’s southeast continues with heavy fighting in the towns of Cizre and Silopi. More than 200 Kurdish fighters have been killed in the operation over the last two weeks, according to an army statement issued on Saturday.

A two-year ceasefire between the Turkish government and Kurdish militants fell apart in July, reigniting the three-decade conflict that has already claimed the lives of more than 40,000 people.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: autonomy, Kurd, Turkey

Erdogan poppet Barzani reject Russian claims of Turkey-bound ISIL oil tankers

December 27, 2015 By administrator

236667Iraqi Kurds have dismissed Russia‘s allegation that oil belonging to the radical terrorist Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) travels through Iraqi Kurdistan before ending up in Turkey.

Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) official Kifah Mahmoud said Russian claims about oil sales in the Kurdistan region do not reflect reality. “Our oil tankers go to oil refineries in Turkey through the Habur border gate.”

In an address to reporters on Friday, Gen. Sergei Rudskoy, director of the Main Operations Center of the Russian General Staff, said due to the increasing number of air strikes in Syria, oil smugglers traveling to Turkey have changed their route.

He claimed that the destination of the oil trafficking is Turkey and that ISIL terrorists, stripped of their usual route due to intensified air strikes in Syria, had changed their route to one traveling through the Iraqi cities of Mosul and Zakho.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: ISIL, Kurd, oil, Turkey

Tens of thousands of Turkey/Kurd civilians trapped in war zone in southeast

December 26, 2015 By administrator

203062Tens of thousands of civilians in southeast Turkey have been caught in the middle as government forces and Kurdish militants battle it out in urban areas — violence that has shattered hopes of reviving peace talks, the Associated Press reports.

Turkish security forces launched a large-scale operation last week hoping to rout militants linked to the outlawed Kurdistan Worker’s Party, or PKK, and say more than 180 of them have been killed. Thousands of troops and tanks have been sent to crush pockets of resistance across mainly Kurdish districts, where PKK fighters and youth have set up trenches to keep them at bay. Flashpoints have been under a 24-hour curfew since mid-December.

While there have been repeated clashes and long curfews since the collapse of peace talks in July, many in the region had hoped the talks would resume after a November election gave a decisive majority to the Justice and Development Party founded by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

“If things continue like this, we will become just like Syria,” says Mehmet Salih Bagata, a lawyer in the southeastern town of Cizre, the scene of the heaviest clashes and the highest reported fatalities since authorities stepped up military operations.

“The government was using light weapons in the beginning but now it’s using heavy weapons,” says Abdullah Ekinci, a human rights activist who left Cizre with his family just before the start of security operations. “You cannot use tanks in civilian areas. The government is using disproportionate force.”

He estimates that more than half a million people are stuck in lockdown areas across the southeast. Many families, especially large or poor ones, do not have the luxury of leaving.

Related links:

AP. Turkish civilians stuck in urban war zone in southeast

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: civilians trapped, Kurd, PKK, Turkey

Turkish historian: Something like Armenian Genocide is occurring in Turkey

December 26, 2015 By administrator

Somthing like armenianYEREVAN. – A force that considers the Kurds an internal enemy currently rules in Turkey, stated renowned Turkish historian Ayşe Hür.

Hür commented on the Turkish authorities’ policy conducted in the country’s Kurdish-populated regions, and stressed that PM Ahmet Davutoğlu’s statement—“We will clean up in each home”—is a mafia terminology and contains a hint of genocide, reported the Kurdish DIHA news agency.

“The developments unrolling today [in Turkey] are similar to the 1915 Armenian Genocide,” Ayşe Hür said. “In 1915, the Armenians also were in a political awakening and were making political demands, which ended with the deportation and genocide.”

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Armenian, Genocide, historian, Kurd, Turkish

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