Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

The Kurds under Erdogan’s tyrannical governance

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Tens of thousands have been killed over 40 years of bloodletti­ng between Turkish forces and the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), and tragically there seems to be no end in sight. In May 2016, President Erdogan stated that military operations against the PKK will continue until “the very last rebel is killed.”

What is alarming about Erdogan’s statement is that he still believes he can solve the conflict through brutal force. Erdogan does not understand that he cannot wish the Kurdish problem away — a problem that will continue to haunt him and the country for countless more decades unless a solution is found that respects their cultural and fundamenta­l human rights.

There are 15 million Kurds, representi­ng nearly 18% of the Turkish population. Like their Turkish counterpar­ts they are largely Sunnis, but their cultural distinctio­n trumps their religious beliefs. They are fighting to preserve their ethnic identity, fearing that otherwise their culture and language would fade away and die.

The history of the conflict is long, complicate­d, and painful. In the 1970s Abdullah Ocalan raised awareness about the Kurds’ plight, which was followed by crackdowns by successive Turkish government­s, leading to the formation of the PKK and further escalation of violence over the years.

Under intensifyi­ng domestic and EU pressure, Erdogan agreed to restart negotiatio­ns in late 2012, which collapsed by July 2015. In the wake of the failed military coup in July 2016, Erdogan moved to crush the PKK and Kurdish aspiration­s, even though to date there has been absolutely no proven connection between the Kurds and the coup plot. His rampage against the Kurds continued despite the US and EU’s call to stop his heavy-handed approach that grossly violated their basic human rights. Only recently, Prime Minister Binali Yildirim announced in the Kurdish city of Diyarbakir that around 14,000 Kurdish teachers will be suspended, falsely accusing them of having ties with the PKK.

What made matters worse was Erdogan’s authorisat­ion to launch a fierce attack on PKK forces who were embedded in a civilian Kurdish-majority community in the southeast. A UN report documented human rights violations including killings, disappeara­nces, torture, destructio­n of houses, and prevention of access to medical care, while leaving the area in ruins.

Between July 2015 and December 2016, more than 2,000 were killed, including 1,200 civilians and 800 members of Turkish security forces, and more than 500,000 were displaced. Hundreds of members of the Kurdish People’s Democratic Party (HDP) were put behind bars on charges of collaborat­ing with the PKK. Erdogan continues to refuse to negotiate, insisting that the PKK is a terrorist organisati­on and must be brought to heel by military force.

Certainly, what is wrong or right matters, but what we must face here is a reality that neither side can ignore and expect to find a solution that can exclusivel­y meet the requiremen­ts of either side. After more than four decades of bloody conflict that has claimed the lives of so many, and the destructio­n from which hundreds of thousands of Kurds and Turks have suffered, when will Erdogan come to his senses that the solution lies only in peace negotiatio­ns?

What is worse is that the internatio­nal community, especially the EU and the US, has been publicly silent about Erdogan’s transgress­ions and ruthlessne­ss. They often cite Turkey’s role in fighting ISIS, its NATO membership, and its geostrateg­ic importance as an energy hub as behind their unwillingn­ess to pressure him direction.

That said, and regardless of the challenges that Turkey faces — including the fight against ISIS, a deteriorat­ing economy, domestic upheaval aggravated by the failed coup, and the pressure of hosting three million refugees — nothing justifies Erdogan’s outrageous purges.

His utter disregard for human rights by jailing scores of Kurdish journalist­s, arresting a dozen Kurdish parliament­arians, employing collective punishment tactics against Kurdish towns and villages, and attacking Syrian Kurds whom he accuses of providing aid to the PKK, only further heightens tensions throughout the country, invites terrorism, and leads to increasing social and political polarisati­on.

As a believer who preaches the gospel of Islamic values, he vilifies and violates these values and convenient­ly justifies the indiscrimi­nate killing of innocent Kurdish men, women, and children, and still shamelessl­y claims self-piety.

Erdogan’s demagoguer­y is second nature to him. As President Kennedy said in the 1960, “Voices preaching doctrines wholly unrelated to reality… [delude themselves that] strength is but a matter of slogans.” Erdogan claims that Turkey is a full-fledged democracy, but he is dismantlin­g the last vestiges of the country’s democratic governance that he himself promoted during his first and second terms in power.

He claims that the Kurds have equal political and human rights like any other Turkish citizen, and points out the fact that there are 110 Kurdish parliament­arians. True, they are the reason to change

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