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Kurdistan Communities Union (KCK) calls upon all Kurdistan people to rise up everywhere

September 10, 2015 By administrator

COi8k8gUsAAfjZ7KCK (Kurdistan Communities Union) Executive Council Co-Presidency has released a statement calling for total resistance against the increasingly ongoing terror by Turkish state forces in Northern Kurdistan, the Kurdish region in Turkey.

Stressing that the people of Cizre should be supported in the same way the the resistance in Kobanê was supported, KCK called on the people to to act in line with the the Kurdistan People’s Initiative’s call for a long freedom march to Cizre, highlighting support to this call issued in solidarity with the people of the town under attack by Turkish state forces.

Describing the situation in Bakurê (Northern) Kurdîstan and Turkey as an attack to make the Kurdish people surrender, KCK recalled that 5 to 6 civilians were being killed every day for the last one and a half month during which a number of towns in the region have been demolished and destroyed by heavy weapon attacks.

Pointing to the huge siege and attack on the town of Cizre Botan, one of the major centers of resistance in Kurdistan history, KCK stated that snipers positioned on high buildings are shooting civilians that go out, while Turkish forces bombed neighborhoods and streets with heavy weapons, which didn’t allow the locals to go our for a five minute even to meet their basic needs.

“Attacks aim to make the people surrender by both killing them and depriving them of food and water. The majority of those killed and wounded is made up by women and children. The Turkish state is not committed to any moral or social values. It even disobeys its own laws and therefore blatantly perpetrates any kind of persecution and attack. The silence of the world also encourages and plays a role in the execution of these attacks.”

Remarking that all Kurdistan people faced a major duty in the face of the current situation, KCK said the Kurdish people in four parts of Kurdistan, those in Europe, Armenia and Russia as well, must immediately rise up everywhere they live and display solidarity with their kins subjected to massacre, persecution and repression.

KCK underlined that all democratic and revolutionary forces in Turkey, Middle East and the world should also rise up to avoid being being a party to this persecution in Kurdistan, adding; “The people of Cizre should be supported in the same way the the resistance in Kobanê was supported. It is time to rise up and stand by the people of Bakurê (Northern) Kurdîstan, the people of Cizre in the first place.

Source: ANFnews

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: KCK, Kurd, rise up, Turkey

The violence against the Kurds in Turkey intensifies

September 10, 2015 By administrator

arton115963-480x256Hundreds of Kurdish civilians were injured in western Turkey and several were killed in attacks by mobs that police participated.

Turkish President Erdogan and his party, the AKP, led racist groups, nationalists and fascists in violent demonstrations. They undertook terror actions against Kurdish civilians in many cities of western Turkey, including Istanbul, Ankara, Kirsehir, Kocaeli, İzmir, Balıkesir, Malatya, Mulga, Mersin, Keçiören, Tuzluçayır, Beypazarı , Balgat, Isparta, Konya and Antalya. They conducted coordinated attacks against homes, businesses and institutions of the Kurds and against the offices of the HDP?. The attacks lasted for 48 hours.

See interactive map of the attacks against the Kurds in Turkey HERE

Following the article, see link below

Thursday, September 10, 2015,
Jean Eckian © armenews.com
Other information available: on AKB.bzh

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: intensifies, Kurd, Turkey, Violence

From Armenian Genocide To Kurdish Rebels, Turkey Is A Nation In Denial

September 10, 2015 By administrator

Anti-PKK protests in Ankara

Anti-PKK protests in Ankara

By Worldcrunch

ISTANBUL — One of the most distinguishable qualities of Turkey’s Sunni Muslim majority is their penchant for jumping. Jumping one step forward from where they’re supposed to be, jumping one paragraph below the one they should actually read, jumping just clear of the matter they should consider or the historical issue at hand.

They can’t, for example, discuss Armenian genocide. Because it’s not possible to talk about the period when the genocide was planned and practiced. They always jump to what happened after because that is where Armenian acts of revenge can be found. They rationalize the mass organized slaughter and deportation of people from their homeland by saying, “but, but…” and talking about “Armenian gangs” and their actions. Somehow, though, there is never consideration for how and why these gangs were formed in the first place.

I start with Armenian genocide because I don’t think the handling of the Kurdish issue is isolated from that. In fact, I don’t think any issue in Turkey is isolated from that. This is our national style.

The objection, “but the PKK!,” the acronym for the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, comes the second the Kurdish issue is mentioned. This is how the majority and the government rationalizes dealing with and talking about this persecuted minority. Because the PKK considers murder part of politics. The PKK kills people and does things that many supporters of equal citizenship and civil rights for Kurds find deplorable.

Denying the facts

But most of the people who blindly hold anti-Kurd views and who fail to consider why there is a militant faction of Kurds simply don’t want to accept the truth. They would have to do something about if they accepted the truth. They would have to share life in this country with the Kurds as equal citizens, an idea that disturbs them. The Sunni majority doesn’t want to lose its dominance.

What are these unacceptable truths that make them jump?

First: The truth that the Kurds are oppressed in this country. Why should they be oppressed? Why is this an unchangeable situation? The majority doesn’t have an answer. Neither does the state. “It is like that. You will be oppressed. Who will we oppress if not you?”

Second: The majority of Kurds consider the PKK the “armed organization of the Kurds.” There is a bond between them that can’t be severed by speaking about the crimes and wrongdoings of the PKK, no matter how justified the criticism. The majority and the state have burned their villages, which only further convinces these people that they should have an armed organization.

Am I going too far? Excuse me if I go back to the Armenian genocide again. Memories from that time push a threatened and oppressed people to prioritize how they can survive. Most of the surviving Armenians who managed to escape were from areas where they could arm and defend themselves.

Can the Kurds, who were siding with the oppressors back then, forget this? What do the state’s actions regarding Kobane, Tal Abyad and Carablus tell the Kurds? The message is clear: “We can have you killed for our own benefit. We can turn a blind eye to your women being kidnapped and sold as slaves. We can take your land from you.” For those who might have doubts, check to see that Qandil is being bombed again.

Turkey’s self-created monster

The Kurdish belief that they need an army is a direct consequence of actions by both the state and the Sunni majority more generally. Because too many Kurds who tried to create change through politics and not arms wound up dead or in jail.

Burning down villages and forests were important counter-guerrilla methods of the state in the 1990s. These methods alone must have gained the PKK a few thousand militants. This also caused domestic migration and created a poor and angry young generation in the cities. This message from the Turkish government was, “I can burn your village. I can burn your forests. I can kill your cattle. You will not make a peep. You will move to the ghettos of the city and become beggars, street vendors and porters.” The Kurds preferred to make a peep. Is that so strange, so unexpected?

Read the full article: From Armenian Genocide To Kurdish Rebels, Turkey Is A Nation In Denial
Worldcrunch – top stories from the world’s best news sources

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Armenian, denial, Genocide, Kurd, rebels, Turkey

Turkey’s HDP warns government not to push country into civil war

September 9, 2015 By administrator

d08505a1-f10d-4ca2-9236-0093e89382edThe leader of Turkey’s main opposition Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) has warned the government in Ankara of the potential breakout of a civil war in the country.

Selahattin Demirtas, who is himself a member of Turkey’s Kurd community, said it is the people’s right to respond to those who attempt to burn their homes, businesses, and party building with “proportional” force.

“Everyone should use proportional means to defend themselves,” Demirtas said on Wednesday during a press conference in Turkey’s eastern province of Diyarbakir. “You have got to force them to regret what they do,” threatened Demirtas.

The co-chairman of the pro-Kurdish, left-wing political party accused Turkey’s ruling party of stoking violence in the country to drum up nationalists’ support ahead of an upcoming election.

Turkey is to hold snap elections on November 1 to choose a government after inconclusive polls held in June cancelled the AK Party’s decade-long rule in the parliament.

Demirtas said the pro-Kurdish opposition party was currently “facing a campaign of lynching” orchestrated by the AKP.

Demirtas’ comments came after a night of nationalist protests in the capital, Ankara, and elsewhere, during which several HDP offices and shops belonging to Kurds were set on fire.

“Tonight alone, 186 attacks were carried out. And our headquarters were targeted. This is definitely a planned attack that was orchestrated from one particular place,” said the HDP deputy chairman, Alp Altinors.

“The president and his staff at the palace are the ones behind these attacks,” Altinors argued.

Turkish nationalists see the HDP as the de facto political wing of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), a militant group fighting the Ankara government for autonomy.

The HDP denies such claims. However, it has voiced its opposition to waging war against Kurds.

Nationalist anger toward Kurds has increased following recent attacks on security forces and police officers by the PKK in Turkey’s southeast.

At least 14 police officers were killed in a roadside bomb attack in eastern Turkey’s Igdir Province earlier on Tuesday.

In a separate attack on the same day, at least three Turkish police officers were reportedly killed in a rocket-propelled grenade attack by the PKK militants on their armored vehicle in the town of Cizre, the southeastern province of Sirnak.

Turkey has been engaged in one of its biggest security operations in the southern border region over the past weeks. The Turkish military has been conducting offensives against alleged positions of Takfiri Daesh terrorists in northern Syria as well as those of the PKK in northern Iraq and southeastern Turkey.

The security operations began in the wake of the deadly July 20 bomb attack in the southern Turkish town of Suruc, an ethnically Kurdish town located close to the Kurdish town of Kobani on the other side of the border in Syria, where over 30 people died. The Turkish government blamed Daesh for the bombing. On July 22, the PKK claimed responsibility for the killing of two Turkish police officers, saying they were cooperating with Daesh.

The PKK has been fighting for an autonomous Kurdish region inside Turkey since the 1980s. The conflict has left tens of thousands of people dead.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: civil war, Kurd, PKK, Turkey

Attacks crowds coordinated and lynchings against the Kurds in western Turkey

September 9, 2015 By administrator

Hundreds of Kurdish civilians were injured in western Turkey and several were killed in attacks by mobs that police participated.

Turkish President Erdogan and his party, the AKP, led racist groups, nationalists and fascists in violent demonstrations. They undertook terror actions against Kurdish civilians in many cities of western Turkey, including Istanbul, Ankara, Kirsehir, Kocaeli, İzmir, Balıkesir, Malatya, Mulga, Mersin, Keçiören, Tuzluçayır, Beypazarı , Balgat, Isparta, Konya and Antalya. They conducted coordinated attacks against homes, businesses and institutions of the Kurds and against the offices of the HDP. The attacks lasted for 48 hours.

Hundreds of Kurdish civilians were injured in these attacks and many were killed. Hundreds of Kurds are also stranded in different HDP office where they fled for protection from mob lynchings. Racist groups demolished signs, broke the windows and shouted slogans against the Kurds and the HDP. However, the Turkish police did not intervene to stop these acts of terror and vandalism.

Since the beginning of the war waged by Turkey against the Kurds, or 32 years, this is the first time we are witnessing the violence committed on such a large scale. These racist and nationalist violence is directly and deliberately caused by Erdogan and the AKP. There are two days, Erdogan has officially ordered the police to shoot on sight any civilian considered to represent a “threat”. He also called on the population to denounce any individual deemed “suspicious.” This reflects a desire to divide society, stirring up inter-ethnic conflicts and boost anti-Kurdish racism.

The violence against the Kurds are planned and coordinated through social networks. In the space of 48 hours, 128 HDP offices were attacked, their signs were destroyed and replaced with Turkish flags. Several offices were also torched. Violent groups have stopped long bus line and checked the identities of passengers to identify those who were Kurds. When the drivers tried to continue their journey to escape the rabid groups, the police intervened to stop the bus, exposing drivers and passengers to more violence. Several times we saw the police take part in attacks against the Kurds by fascist groups.

The aggressions against Kurds continues in the cities of the West, threatening hundreds of thousands of people.

We urge the international community to support the Kurds face these extremely disturbing assaults conducted in a coordinated manner and to immediately call the Erdogan government to cease its divisive policies advocating violence and racism.

Kurdistan National Congress (KNK)

September 8, 2015

Wednesday, September 9, 2015,
Ara © armenews.com

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

“Turks fascism” Kurdish man forced to kiss Atatürk statue in southwest Turkey

September 8, 2015 By administrator

DHA photo

DHA photo

Turkish nationalists in the southwestern city of Manisa have forced a Kurdish man to kiss a statue of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk as a “punishment” for a social media message he posted, Doğan News Agency reported on Sept. 8.

According to the report, the man, identified only as İbrahim Ç., shared a photo on Facebook of himself wearing the uniform of the peshmerga military force of the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG), alongside the message “It is an honor to wear this uniform.”

Many outraged Facebook users then shared the photo, claiming that he was a supporter of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), which has staged attacks and killed dozens of Turkish security forces since July 20.

After his post spread online, İbrahim Ç. was tracked down and attacked in the Kumluova district of Muğla province. A group of locals beat him and tore his clothes before forcing him to kiss a statue of Atatürk in the city.

The man, who was born in the southeastern province of Şanlıurfa, was injured and reportedly taken to hospital by gendarmie forces who arrived at the scene.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: ataturk, fascism, Kurd, Turkey

Kurdish man stabbed to death in alleged racist attack

September 8, 2015 By administrator

This photo, showing Sedat Akbaş on a motorcycle, is taken from T24 website

This photo, showing Sedat Akbaş on a motorcycle, is taken from T24 website

A young man of Kurdish ethnicity was stabbed to death by a group of nationalists in İstanbul’s Kağıthane district on Monday night, and his relatives have claimed the attack was racially motivated, the Evrensel daily reported.

Sedat Akbaş was reportedly attacked by a group of six nationalists near a coffee house in Kağıthane that allegedly belongs to a citizen who reportedly considers himself a nationalist. After noticing that Akbaş was talking on the phone in Kurdish, the group verbally insulted him with racial slurs before stabbing him to death. The 21-year-old man was taken by ambulance to the Okmeydanı Teaching and Research Hospital where he later succumbed to his injuries. A police investigation was immediately launched to capture the assailants.

Speaking to Evrensel, Suat Akbaş, a relative of Sedat, said the police told him they had already caught some of the assailants who confessed that they killed Akbaş because of his Kurdish ethnicity. “They killed him because they heard him speaking in Kurdish on the phone,” Suat Akbaş stated.

However, the İstanbul Police Department released a written statement early on Tuesday in which it claimed that Akbaş was killed not because he was speaking on the phone in Kurdish but in a skirmish that erupted after he attacked a group of people. The police department also added that Akbaş was drunk.

Sedat reportedly leaves behind a daughter and newly pregnant wife.

This is not the first time that a man of Kurdish origin has been beaten to death by nationalists in the past 12 months. Another ethnic Kurd, Mahir Çetin, died as a result of head injuries after being set upon by a group of 20-30 young men from Turkey’s ultranationalist Ülkücü (Idealist) movement in Antalya’s Kaş district on Sept. 3, 2014.

Vedat Çetin, Çetin’s cousin, who was seriously wounded during the incident, told police that the group insulted them using racist slurs and then physically assaulted them. Mahir Çetin died in the hospital after suffering a brain hemorrhage and was buried by his family on Sept. 5 in a funeral ceremony held in Batman’s Sinan village.

Source: Zaman

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Evrensel, İstanbul, Kağıthane, Kurd, Sedat Akbaş, Turkey

BBC: Turkey sends ground forces into Iraq after militant attacks

September 8, 2015 By administrator

The PKK destroyed a police minibus near Turkey's far eastern border hours after dozens of fighter jets attacked rebel bases

The PKK destroyed a police minibus near Turkey’s far eastern border hours after dozens of fighter jets attacked rebel bases

Turkish ground forces have crossed into Iraq in pursuit of Kurdish militants for the first time since a ceasefire two years ago.

Government officials said the incursion was a “short-term” measure to hunt down PKK (Kurdistan Workers’ Party) rebels.

Turkish warplanes also launched a wave of air strikes on PKK bases in northern Iraq on Tuesday.

Meanwhile, at least 14 Turkish police officers died in a bomb attack blamed on Kurdish militants on Tuesday.

The attack in eastern Igdir province came a day after suspected PKK bombs killed at least 16 Turkish soldiers in the south-eastern Hakkari region.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said the PKK had suffered “serious damage” inside and outside of Turkey and was in a state of “panic”.

“Turkish security forces crossed the Iraqi border as part of the hot pursuit of PKK terrorists who were involved in the most recent attacks,” a government source told AFP news agency.

“This is a short-term measure intended to prevent the terrorists’ escape.”

Turkey’s Dogan news agency said two special forces units, supported by warplanes, had been sent in to combat two 20-strong groups of militants.

At least 35 rebels were killed in air raids by F4 and F16 jets on bases at Qandil, Basyan, Avashin and Zap early on Tuesday, according to the Anadolu news agency.

Spiral of attacks – by Selin Girit, BBC News, Istanbul

Not a day passes by in Turkey these days without violence. And as one attack follows another, emotions are running high.

The funerals of 16 soldiers killed in Sunday’s PKK attack were taking place on Tuesday.

Several thousand people have protested in cities across Turkey against PKK violence and the premises of the pro-Kurdish HDP party have come under attack. There were reports of attempted arson.

There is now serious concern that the violence could spiral out of control.

Turkey is gearing up for snap elections on 1 November after the ruling AK Party lost its overall majority in June elections and failed to form a coalition government.

It was the HDP that deprived the AKP of its majority, polling over 13% of the vote and entering parliament as a political party for the first time.

Opposition figures have voiced concerns about maintaining poll security, especially in Turkey’s predominantly Kurdish east and south-east of the country.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: ground forces, Kurd, PKK, Turkey

Vancouver, BC: Kurdish community to protest Ottawa’s refugee limit

September 5, 2015 By administrator

By Mike Hager  VANCOUVER — The Globe and Mail,

COMRwHdWsAAbKVfBritish Columbia’s small Kurdish community is rallying around the aunt of a drowned Syrian boy, whose parents had given up hope of settling in Canada, to demand Ottawa accept more refugees fleeing the humanitarian crisis.

Shwan Chawshin, a spokesperson for the non-profit Kurdish House, which plans community gatherings, said his group is organizing the several thousand Kurdish people living in the province to join a rally in Vancouver on Sunday calling on the Canadian government to at least double its stated commitment to admitting 10,000 Syrian refugees by the end of 2017.

Tima Kurdi, who is Kurdish, is expected to be there, he said. Ms. Kurdi is the Coquitlam woman who had once planned on sponsoring her brother’s family before his wife and children drowned off the coast of Turkey. Photos of Ms. Kurdi’s three-year-old nephew Alan’s limp body were “very sad not just for the Kurdish community, but to the whole world,” Mr. Chawshin said.

“We want Canada to pay attention to those countries that are torn apart by war,” Mr. Chawshin said. “To many people, Canadian immigration policy is prejudiced and discriminatory.”

Mr. Chawshin, who also runs the KurdTV program on a local multicultural channel, said he remembers being only the second Kurd in the province when he fled northern Iraq and arrived in British Columbia, by way of Sweden, in 1984. Most of the Kurdish population is spread across Turkey, Iran, Iraq, Armenia and Syria, so arrivals list those countries as their nationality when entering Canada, Mr. Chawshin said. That makes it difficult to know the true size of the B.C. community, which is estimated at between 3,000 and 4,000.

Several hundred Kurdish refugees arrived in Metro Vancouver in the mid-1990s after fleeing Saddam Hussein’s renewed oppression in northern Iraq, according to Chris Friesen, who is the director of settlement services at the non-profit Immigration Services Society of B.C. Most of those immigrants are now “doing exceptionally well,” he said.

Ottawa honoured a 2013 commitment to resettle 1,300 Syrian refugees this past March and a spokesman with Citizenship and Immigration Canada says the department has so far settled 1,074 new Syrians as part of its January goal to resettle another 10,000 over the next three years.

The government wouldn’t provide a breakdown of where those Syrians have put down roots, but Quebec has taken the largest share and B.C. has welcomed only 72, according to Mr. Friesen, who also chairs the Canadian Immigrant Settlement Sector Alliance lobby group.

Mr. Friesen said those refugees often “are arriving with varying degrees of trauma, because the war is so near to them.”

“Many family members are dealing with horrific migration experiences,” he said.

Most are provided with housing allowances matching B.C.’s $375 welfare rates and have settled in Vancouver suburbs such as New Westminster, Surrey and Coquitlam, Mr. Friesen said.

After news broke of the Kurdi family’s tragedy, Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson said Thursday he has asked the city manager to review how the municipality can offer more immediate assistance to refugees from Syria and Iraq.

Shirley Bond, B.C.’s minister responsible for labour, issued a statement Thursday saying immigration decisions “lie entirely with the federal government,” but that her province will continue to welcome the settlement of refugees.

Mr. Friesen said the imbalance in how many Syrian refugees the provinces take in exists because Canada is overly reliant on the private sponsorship of refugees, by either faith groups or family members, many of whom are living in Quebec.

Mr. Friesen’s national association is calling on the government to initiate its refugee emergency contingency plan, created in 2002 after the Kosovo crisis, to expedite the immigration of Syrian refugees with family in Canada. As well, the group wants Ottawa to consult with the United Nations and European Union to finalize an emergency settlement target, which could greatly increase the number of Syrian refugees Canada agrees to welcome.

Source:

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: BC, Kurd, refugee, Vancouver

Memorial in Vancouver for Alan Kurdi and his brother who drowned while trying to flee Syria

September 5, 2015 By administrator

THE CANADIAN PRESS

Tima Kurdi, the aunt of two Syrian boys  Photograph by: Jason Payne

Tima Kurdi, the aunt of two Syrian boys
Photograph by: Jason Payne

COQUITLAM — A memorial service is planned in Vancouver Saturday for two little Syrian boys who drowned in Turkey in a tragedy that has attracted worldwide attention.

A picture of the body of three-year-old Alan Kurdi on a Turkish beach received prominent worldwide attention and has sparked debate about the plight of refugees from the region.

Tima Kurdi of Coquitlam, B.C., says her nephew, his five-year-old brother Ghalib, and their mother, Rehanna, were buried in Syria by her brother, Abdullah, on Thursday.

She says the family was fleeing Syria, where Islamic State militants had beheaded one of her sister-in-law’s relatives.

Kurdi says the trip was the “only option” left for the family to have a better life in a European country, possibly Germany or Sweden.

She says Abdullah embarked on the risky journey with his family after a bid by another brother to seek refugees status in Canada failed.

Kurdi says she sent Abdullah five-thousand dollars to pay smugglers to take them on a boat.

Family friends have set up an online fundraising campaign to help the Kurdi family.

Source: vancouversun.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Alan Kurdi, Kurd, Memorial, Vancouver

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