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Kurds see that IS is a Turkish subcontractor used against the Kurds.

October 13, 2014 By administrator

The state is fighting Kurds through IS.’

Turkish soldiers in armoured vehicles patrol the streets of DiyarbakirOn Oct. 7, I joined my colleague and old friend Hasan Cemal at dinner in Istanbul. While I was on my way to the restaurant, I learned about disturbances in the Kurdish-inhabited provinces of Turkey, loss of lives and the imposition of a curfew in six provincial centers and a number of districts.  

By Cengiz Candar is a columnist for Al-Monitor‘s Turkey Pulse.

As we sat down for dinner, we were informed that in different areas in Istanbul clashes had erupted between protesters and security forces; Cemal was receiving calls nonstop. He told me early the next morning that he would go to the border province of Mardin to be hosted by Mayor Ahmet Turk, a veteran Kurdish politician and perhaps the most respected Kurdish name in Turkish public opinion.

This news did not surprise me. Cemal is considered the dean of the Turkish journalism corps. He has been in the profession for over 40 years, and he served as the editor-in-chief of Turkey’s oldest paper Cumhuriyet for a decade. During the military rule of the early 1980s, he was on the Executive Committee of the International Press Institute. After a long and brilliant professional career, he dedicated himself to field reporting mainly on the Kurdish issue. He traveled frequently and developed strong connections among the Kurdish political elite. He just published a new book titled, “Kurdistan Gunlukleri” (“Kurdistan Chronicles”), about his extensive travels and contacts in Rojava, the Syrian Kurdish area adjacent to Turkey’s border.

While the aggression of the Islamic State (IS) on Kobani was underway with a reluctant Turkey standing by, watching extremist Islamist forces on the verge of slaughtering the Kurds and thinking of its repercussions in Turkey’s Kurdish population, Cemal could not do anything else but go to the region to report.

And that’s what he did. These are excerpts of a first piece he wrote on Oct. 8 under the title “Serhildan-I” (“Uprising-I” in Kurdish). Reading Cemal’s impressions made the title even more interesting: “Ahmet Turk said, ‘Even I am confounded by this Kobani issue. I was thinking that in the end Turkey would help the Kurds. I was wrong. It didn’t.’”

Cemal believes for Ankara to leave the Kurds alone to face the barbaric IS gangs was the last straw that broke the camel’s back. He wrote, “Those who had never voted for us, those who had supported the AKP [Justice and Development Party] were all at Suruc. They are all in the streets now. Ankara’s policy of let’s leave it to IS to cleanse the PKK [Kurdistan Workers Party] an PYD [Democratic Union Party] and to teach them a lesson has destroyed everything. Beheadings by IS, the rape of women and Turkey’s passivity in the face of all this barbarity has become a breaking point for the Kurds. … Before it was the guerrillas who said that this state cannot be trusted, but now the people in the street are saying it, too. Kurds see how the state is turning a blind eye to IS.”

“The TV was on. We were watching the Sterk and Ronahi Kurdish channels. The news ticker read: ‘A statement by the KCK [Kurdistan Communities Union]: Kobani is AKP’s new war concept.’ A second statement followed: ‘Don’t leave the streets. Every place is Kobani, every place is resistance.’ Striking pictures were aired of streets full of people; places on fire. Ahmet Turk said, ‘I don’t remember anything like this. This is the first time. This is a true uprising, a serhildan. Last night, the governor called me to say, Tell them to go home. It was like a joke. Who is going to listen to us? In popular actions like this a point comes when you can no longer keep a rein.’

“In referring to President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Ahmet Turk said, ‘In the people’s eyes, Erdogan is now a dictator. What kind of arrogance is that?’

“Ahmet Turk continued, ‘Listen, what we have been living through for the past two days is serhildan of Kobani, an uprising. It is beyond an organization. It is an uprising of the people. This state’s mentality has not changed in substance. Look, years later tanks are back on the streets. With this sort of state mentality Kurdish equality is a false dream. You can’t solve the issue with this mentality.'”

Cemal then quotes views of some anonymous Kurds: “On separatism one of them said, ‘The AKP’s policy is to back IS. That’s the policy that is dividing Turkey. Kurds now see this reality. They understand that the solution process is not seeking to solve the question but to undo the Kurds.’

“Another added, ‘Kurds see that IS is a subcontractor used against the Kurds. The state is fighting Kurds through IS.’

“Another said, ‘Erdogan put IS and the PKK in the same basket; called both of them terror organizations. This really hurt the Kurds. They couldn’t believe it.'”

At midnight on Oct. 9, Cemal wrote the “Serhildan-II” piece from the Kurdish town of Suruc on the frontier separated by the railroad from Kobani:

“You hear grievances against Erdogan every step of the way. He said Kobani is about to fall and will fall. Is he aware that Diyarbakir has already fallen? If it continues like this, may God help us; the entire country will be set on fire. Is Erdogan aware of this?”

Arzu Yilmaz is a young academic of Kurdish origin. She is a doctoral candidate in the School of Political Sciences at Ankara University, and she has a reputation as the most perceptive academic personality in regard to the Kurdish issue. For her Ph.D. dissertation, she spent more than two years in Dahuk, Iraqi Kurdistan, where she studied the Kurdish political movement. The moment Turkey’s Kurdish provinces erupted, she wrote the following:

“Don’t let anyone play the three monkeys. Turkey is openly heading to war, not only across its borders but also inside. Kurds have risen. In Kurdistan, there is popular uprising with unprecedented popular participation. … What is clear is that it doesn’t matter what city, town, village. It is like a bomb ready to go off.”

A small news item that may not have attracted the attention of many people, for me is the most striking. Teyrenbazen Azadiya Kurdistan (TAK), believed to be a faction within the PKK that was responsible for a number of acts of urban terrorism, issued a statement that read: “It is time to call to account the owner of the gun barrels pointing at Kobani. From now on, all major cities are our fields of action and all enemy forces are our primary targets. When Kobani is burning, Turkish cities will not be sleeping comfortably. TAK will transfer the conflagration at Kobani to enemy forces in big cities and turn them to hell.”

A media report on Oct. 9 described TAK’s record as follows: “TAK, which is part of the PKK but operates independently from the organization, has until now claimed responsibility for many bomb attacks against big cities and tourist destinations. The attacks in Kusadasi, Marmaris and Antalya in 2005 and 2006, and [the attacks] on June 22, 2010, in Istanbul that killed five people, four of them soldiers, were among those claimed by TAK. The attack on Oct. 31, 2010, at Taksim in Istanbul that wounded 32 people, and [the attack] on Sept. 20, 2011, in Ankara that killed three were also claimed by this organization.”

Turkey is heading down a very dangerous path toward violence, with the potential of a civil war and/or intercommunal fighting. This would be very bad news. Even worse, the PKK and its imprisoned leader Abdullah Ocalan may not be able to control the developments.

We will be watching the scope of the spontaneity of the Kurdish outrage in Turkey and the talent of the Kurdish political elite to handle the situation.

For the government — which seems to have lost its ability to think comprehensively — the task to prevent Turkey from drifting into a civil war depends mainly on the Kurdish political elite and their control over the new generation of Kurds, whose outrage has grown further with the situation in Kobani.

Because if this is a “serhildan,” then it may be the harbinger of worse to come.

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

Turkey, Erdogan wants to strengthen the crackdown after recent pro-Kurdish riots

October 12, 2014 By administrator

arton104209-480x321Turkish Islamic-conservative government will strengthen its legislative framework to combat violence during protests after the pro-Kurdish riots that rocked the country this week, said Sunday President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. “The Republic of Turkey is not a state if it was not able to bend a few thugs. They burn but they will pay the price. We will do more, “promised Mr. Erdogan in a speech in (…)

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

France: Armenian presence at demonstrations in support of Kurdish Kobané

October 12, 2014 By administrator

arton104186-480x360Chanting “Kobané resistance,” thousands of people have again demonstrated Saturday in France, particularly in Paris, in support of the Kurdish city in northern Syria attacked by jihadist group Islamic State (EI).

Gathered Republic Square in the center of the capital, the protesters – 6,000 according to organizers, 5,000 according to police – then walked to Bastille, behind a banner asking, “What are you waiting for action I need regular. Another massacre? “.

“Kobané stand, the people will win”, “Daesh (another name for IR) No pasardn” could also read several placards.

Many red flags of the Workers Party of Kurdistan (PKK) were brandished by the demonstrators, who stepped slogans against Turkey, “accomplice” in their jihadist of IE.

“We urge the international community to stop their inaction and failure, which appear hypocritical in the long,” he told AFP Yekbun Eksen, representative of the Democratic National Coordination of Kurds in France, at the initiative of the gathering.

Denouncing “gruesome calculations Turkey,” member of the international coalition against IE but refuses to join the Kurds of Syria to rescue Kobané Mr. Eksen asked “to let the volunteers take up arms.”

“How can we let our brothers and sisters are being slaughtered?” Lamented Canan Seyhan, a Kurdish nurse 35 years based in Paris, “disgusted by the lack of support from Turkey.”

– “Armenian Presence” –

Several celebrities including Olivier Besancenot Pierre Laurent spoke, urging the French government to protect the Kurdish people against the jihadists of IE. Also note the presence of representatives of the Armenian community including Alexis Govciyan (Chairman of the 2015 mission CFC) filmmaker Robert Kéchichian. Ara Toranian, Co CCAF and Antoine Bagdikian, President of the Armenian Institute of France spoke at the finish of the event to expose the duplicity of Turkey against jihadists and affirm solidarity with Armenians Kurdish resistance. Daniel Augustus, association support Assyrian-Chaldeans also intervened in this direction.

Ara Toranian, co-chair of the American Chamber of Commerce forum

“France must stop his agitation game with Turkey and make it clear that it supports,” said the national secretary of the PCF Pierre Laurent, demanding “the removal of the PKK terrorist organization.”

– “Game disorder” –

In Lyon, 200 to 300 people marched through the city center to “condemn the hypocrisy of Western countries, including France, against the Kurds Kobané” according Dersini Azad, spokesperson of the “support committee the resistor Kobané “.

The protesters carried flags of Kurdistan or the effigy of imprisoned PKK leader Abdullah Öcalan. Among the claims set out in the leaflets: delivery of weapons to the Kurdish resistance or withdrawal of the PKK terrorist organization in the European Union.

In Mulhouse (Haut-Rhin), the event was attended by 600 people. A man, 26, outside the event, with a long knife and brass knuckles, was arrested and taken into custody. Earlier police used tear gas to prevent early skirmish between demonstrators and a man in a car, which had perhaps caused, police said.

Friday night, about 400 demonstrators gathered in Bordeaux and Bayonne to a hundred.

The pro-Kurdish demonstrations increased since mid-September on Advanced Kobané jihadist AR. These strengthened their hold on Saturday much of the city desperately defended by Kurdish forces less able, the UN expressing concern for the lives of thousands of civilians.

More than 20,000 people have also demonstrated Saturday in Dusseldorf, Germany, a country whose Kurdish community is considered the largest in Europe, followed by France.

Photos Robert Kéchichian

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: kobane, kobani, Kurd, Paris

Death toll from Turkey clashes rises to 37

October 11, 2014 By administrator

protest-in-turkeyThe death toll from clashes between Turkish police and pro-Kurdish protesters across the country has risen to 37.

Speaking to reporters in the capital Ankara on Friday, Interior Minister Efkan Ala said 31 people were killed and 351 others injured in the protests that resumed for the fourth consecutive day in various cities, the Hurriyet Daily News reported.

“This spiral of violence should immediately be stopped,” Ala said, adding, “Everyone should do their part to put an end to these incidents. We should all stand in solidarity with each other.”

Over 1,000 protesters have been detained in 35 provinces, he noted.

Hours later, Turkish news agencies reported that six more injured people, including two police officers, died in hospitals.

Police used tear gas and plastic bullets to disperse the protesters who were trying to march to Istanbul’s Taksim Square on Friday. Several people were detained in the crackdown.

The protesters are outraged at the Turkish government for its stance on the ongoing fighting in Syria’s Kurdish town of Kobane.

They accuse Ankara of inaction over the crimes committed by the ISIL Takfiri terrorists by preventing Turkish Kurds to join Kobane’s citizens in their fight against the militants.

The ISIL terror group launched its assault on Kobane three weeks ago, forcing 200,000 mainly Kurdish residents to flee into neighboring Turkey.

The terrorists have committed widespread acts of violence, including mass executions, abductions, torture and forcing women into slavery in the areas they have seized in Iraq and Syria.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Death, Kurd, Protest, Turkey

Syrian Kurds repel 7 ISIL attacks on Kobani

October 11, 2014 By administrator

Kurdish-woman-fighterKurdish militants continue defending the northern Syrian city of Kobani, thwarting seven overnight attacks by the ISIL terrorists aimed at capturing the city.

According to Kurdish sources, the Takfiri militants intensified their onslaught from the south, west and east of the Kurdish city.

Kurdish fighters also foiled at least two attacks by ISIL terrorists near the center of Kobani.

Meanwhile, a UK-based Syrian opposition group says the US-led coalition carried out at least two airstrikes in the eastern and southern parts of Kobani overnight.

However, head of the defense council in Kobani Ismet Sheikh Hassan has dismissed the airstrikes as ineffective, and warned of a possible massacre if Kobani falls to the ISIL.

On Friday, the United Nations’ envoy to Syria Staffan de Mistura warned that thousands of people “will most likely be massacred” if Kobani falls into the hands of ISIL Takfiri militants.

De Mistura further noted that he feared a repeat of the 1995 massacre in Srebrenica, when Bosnian Serb forces marched into the town, and killed more than 8,000 Muslim men and boys at execution sites.

He also urged the Turkish government to allow Kurdish volunteers to cross the border into Kobani and defend it against ISIL militants.

According to the so-called Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which is close to the Syrian opposition, ISIL forces pushed forward on Thursday, and now control at least 40 percent of Kobani, including all eastern areas, a small part of the northeast and an area in the southeast.

However, local Kurdish officials say the Takfiri militants are in control of a small part of the strategic border town.

The weeks-long intense battle for the strategic town has forced nearly 200,000 people to take refuge in Turkey.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: kobani, Kurd, push back

Armed PKK back in Turkey, senior group leader says

October 11, 2014 By administrator

n_72836_1The Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) has deployed armed forces back to Turkey, said Cemil Bayık, a senior leader of the  organization, also retreting his pessimism about the recent talks between the Turkish government and the PKK.

The PKK will restart fights in case killings of Kurds continue in Kobane, the Syrian border town where the clashes between the armed Kurdish forces and Islamist State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) have contiued since more than three weeks.

News agencies report that ISIL keeps advancing in and outside the town, from where more than 150,000 people fled to Turkey.

“If things continue this way, the guerrilas will fight to defend our people. The core task of the guerillas is to defend the people,” Bayık reportedly said.

A group of PKK  launched the symbolic withdrawal in May 2013, as part of the talks to resolve the decades-long Kurdish issue.

Bayık did not mention how many militants were sent back to the Turkish soil.

“As the government continues to deploy soldiers to the southeast and east, we decided to take action,” saying that a military action motion approved at the Turkish Parliament on earlier this week was “a declaration of war” against them.

A total of 37 people were killed this week’s unrest that broke at demostrations in the country, densely at provinces with high Kurdish population.

The PKK calls on government to do more for the Kurds trapped in Kobane. Turkish Deputy Prime Minister Yalçın Akdoğan said Oct. 10 that Turkish soldiers were not mercenaries.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: back, ISIS, Kurd, PKK, Turkey

UN envoy Call for Turkey to let the Kurdish volunteers to protect Kobane

October 10, 2014 By administrator

arton104125-100x69The special UN envoy for Syria Staffan De Mistura on Friday called on Turkey to allow the Syrian Kurdish volunteers back across the border to rescue the city of Kobane attacked by jihadist Islamic state group.

“We call on the Turkish authorities to allow the flow of refugees to enter the city to support its action of self-defense,” said the envoy in a press conference in Geneva, while Turkey banned yet to refugees who crossed the border from Syria to cross back the other way.

He said fears of a “massacre”. “Remember Srebrenica” in the former Yugoslavia, he added. Mr. De Mistura, Pholos satellite support, explained that “10,000 to 13,000 people are at a place in the border area -between Turkey and Syria-and many are still inside the city.” “If it falls, civilians are most likely murdered,” said the diplomat.

“Since Kobane will likely fall if it does not help, let those who want to go to join self-defense, with enough equipment, the equipment can do many things,” said Mr. De Mistura for Turkey.

“It is not through UN resolutions that IE will stop,” he has said. “Our appeal to Turkey is that it takes extra steps to stop the advance of IE, if not all of us, including Turkey, will miss” Has he said.

Jihadists of the Islamic State (AEs) were able to advance in Kobané, became a symbol of resistance to the ultraradical group responsible for atrocities in Syria and Iraq, despite the strikes of the international coalition.

More than three weeks after launching the offensive to take this strategic Kurdish city in northern Syria, besieged south sides, east and west, the jihadists have taken the third since Monday and try to make their way to the northern limit of Kobané, about one km from the Turkish border.

Geneva, 10 October 2014 (AFP) –

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: call, kobane, Kurd, Turkey, UN

Turkey 29 Kurdish demonstrator killed in ISIL-related protests

October 9, 2014 By administrator

Kurd-protestKurdish protesters set fire to a barricade set up to block the street as they clash with riot police in Diyarbakir on October 7, 2014.

At least 29 people have been killed in Turkey in protests over the Turkish government’s policies with regard to the ISIL Takfiri group.

Latest reports said on Thursday that the protests resumed for the fourth consecutive day in different cities across Turkey.

The latest fatalities came on Thursday evening in the province of Gaziantep, where at least four people died in clashes between pro-Kurdish protesters and the ISIL Takfiri supporters.

One individual was also killed in clashes with police in the province of Mardin.

Elsewhere, in the city of Bingol, unknown gunmen injured the city’s police chief and killed his deputy as well as two police officers.

Amnesty International reacted to the recent wave of protests and the use of violence in the country, calling on the Turkish officials to curb the tensions among Turkish riot police, protesters, and the ISIL Takfiri supporters.

“It is essential that the Turkish authorities act now to calm tensions with firm but rights-respecting policing and a commitment to investigate promptly the up to 19 deaths and scores of injuries of protesters,” said Andrew Gardner, Amnesty International’s researcher on Turkey, in a statement published on Wednesday.

“Any use of force by the security forces must be strictly in line with international human rights standards, in particular the principles of necessity and proportionality.”

The pro-Kurdish demonstrators are protesting the government’s inaction with regard to the crimes the ISIL militants are committing in the Syrian border town of Kobane.

“Simmering tensions in Turkey have been brought to boiling point by the conflict in Syria. The government’s actions now will have far-reaching consequences. Calming the situation and investigating the deaths during yesterday’s bloody clashes will help bring some stability to a troubled region,” Gardner added.

On Thursday, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan denounced the protests as a “sabotage” aimed at undermining a peace process between Ankara and the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK).

“It’s very obvious that this game is aimed at sabotaging the peaceful environment in the east and southeast as well as the peace process and our brotherhood,” Erdogan stated.

The ISIL terror group launched its assault on Kobane three weeks ago, forcing 200,000 mainly Kurdish refugees to flee into neighboring Turkey.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Kurd, protest. isil, Turkey

France: The wrath of the Eastern Christians, Kurds and Yezidis in the National Assembly

October 9, 2014 By administrator

DSC07465Before the dramatic events that have marred the Armenians, Assyrians and Chaldeans, Syriacs, Yezidis and Kurds, for several years now, Syria and more recently in Iraq, the Armenian community of France gathered Tuesday, October 7th in the National Assembly for scream outrage at the call of the Coordination Council of Armenian Organizations of France (CCAF), soon joined by the Kurdish Democratic Council of France which resulted in its wake hundreds of Kurdish Yezidi and Assyrian-Chaldean, welcomed the applause of Armenians say stop to the barbarity of the Islamic State and denounce “the inaction of the international community” face of the dramatic situation in Kobanê.

Of numerous personalities from the political class and the voluntary sector have thus succeeded in the gallery of the Edouard Herriot up to about a little over 1,600 people determined, demanding weapons to the PKK and humanitarian support for survivors of Kobanê. The attitude of Turkey, accomplice of IE by its negligence and inaction to assist Kurdish fighters, has been widely criticized and booed by the protesters.

Among those present who were not raised at the forum, we could recognize François Bayrou (Modem), Henri Jibrayel (PS) -d’origine chaldéene- Assyrian-François Pupponi (PS) and François Rochebloine (UDI).

100 years after the 1915 genocide that has hit hard the Armenians, Assyrians and Chaldeans, Syriacs and Greeks (1916-1923), as saying all Christians in Turkey, history is repeating itself in Iraq and Syria under the hordes bloody Sunni Islamic state.

After Mosul, Aleppo, Kessab Kobanê, and the destruction of the Holy Martyrs memorial at Deir-ez-Zor, Supreme Criminal stage of the Armenian Genocide, the madness of the IU raises worldwide anger and indignation. That’s what came to tell the elect of the Republic of France diasporic communities expressing their anger, while at the same time the Turkish police charged the Kurdish community in Diyarbakir killing 18, while Erdogan said he was supposedly supports the creation of a buffer zone between Syria and Turkey during a telephone conversation with President Holland.

After a preliminary presentation of the expected speakers Harout Mardirossian (CDCA) left the floor to co-president Mourad Papazian CFC. In his opening speech of the rally, the latter heavily denounced “barbaric jihadists who both Iraq and Syria aim to spread terror among the population in the slaying. The horror of the Islamic state is unbearable and it is in the union of the Armenians, Kurds, Assyrian-Chaldeans, Yezidis and Christians of the East, we must condemn the court of public opinion and states. “Has he said. Then hammering “the goal is to install the jihadists in Iraq and Syria ultra-Islamist and fascist regimes. And in this context, the Turkish government pretended to want to fight, but the reality is quite different. Ankara is home to jihadists, drives the jihadists, finance jihadists. The goal of Turkey is to take advantage of the situation, not to fight the Islamic state, but to weaken the Kurdish and get rid of Armenians and Christians. Ankara is using the conflict and subcontracts jihadists elimination of Armenians and Armenian any traces in Syria. We have seen in making Kessab and blasting the Church and the memorial at Deir-ez-Zor, a symbol of the Armenian Genocide. Deir Zor is the Auschwitz of the Armenians!. “Continuing his remarks, Mourad Papazian insisted:” Turkey is not a reliable ally. , We know that it is not possible to trust him! While the Turks might intervene militarily to prevent jihadists seize Kobanê, we find that they promote their advanced preventing Kurds from Turkey to strengthen the ranks of the resistance Daesh. “ Finally, to conclude, Mourad Papazian called for the intensification of the anti-Jihad fight, calling the coalition to organize a ground intervention, the only way to push back the forces of evil and occupation. “

For Valerie Boyer (UMP) ‘if genocide was to take place today, it will be because the Armenian genocide was not prevented or punished those responsible! “. She also outraged over the destruction of the Church of Deir ez-Zor, “the Auschwitz of the Armenians,” said she said, pointing to the double game of Turkey.

The representative of CRIF, Gil Taieb, for his part, speaking on behalf of the Jewish people and exclaimed: “Today you should know that you are not alone,” he “will have to continue, talking, screaming. We’ll have around us to explain that no one can rest easy, knowing that somewhere in this world there are men and women who weep, who are massacred, abducted and murdered! “

 

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Armenian, France, Kurd, Yazidi

Curfew imposed in Turkey

October 8, 2014 By administrator

curfew-turkeyFollowing the mass protests by Kurds, the Turkish authorities have declared curfew, Lenta.ru reported.

According to the source, fourteen people were killed and dozens were injured during the mass demonstrations.

The curfew was imposed in several provinces.

The Kurdish protests in Turkey are due to the fact that the Islamists have virtually captured Kobani, which is a Syrian city on the Turkish border and which is the capital of the Kurdish autonomy.

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

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