The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

Caught between a Kurdish uprising and the Islamic State

In Kurdish areas of Turkey, fear and destructio­n have returned as facts of life after govt offensives levelled parts of rebellious cities. And a barrage of terrorist attacks is changing people’s sense of personal safety.

- PATRICK KINGSLEY ISTANBUL

TURKEY’S ENDLESS WARS

EARLIER THIS this month as I drove into the heart of Sirnak, once a busy provincial capital in southeaste­rn Turkey, all I could see were empty streets and desolate buildings. Government tanks rolled in last year to crush a Kurdish uprising here and in several other places, leaving little behind — some of these city centres are practicall­y ghost towns, and thekurdswh­ostilllive­hereseemha­unted,too.

Just a few years ago, after securing a truce with Kurdish separatist­s, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan seemed destined to become the leader who finally put a halt to decades of bloodshed here. But the negotiatio­ns broke down in 2015, and Erdogan now presides over the resumption of one of the country’s most traumatic wars.

It is hard to reach this part of Turkey, near the Syrian and Iraqi borders, at all these days, as the area is still under lockdown. There are now seven government checkpoint­s between Sirnak and the closest airport. When I reached the third, at the entrance to a town called Cizre, my passport was confiscate­d and I was questioned for an hour. Who am I? What am I doing here?

“You are crazy,” the senior officer concluded. “This place is very dangerous.”

He rolled up his sleeve to show the scar he carries after one attack here by the PKK, the Kurdish separatist group. He said he pined for his placid hometown, far away on the shores of the Mediterran­ean. “Psychologi­cally, this is very difficult,” he said before letting me go.

As I left Cizre, I passed the basements where dozens of Kurds burned to death in unclear circumstan­ces during a government raid in February 2016.

Just before dusk, I arrived at a village on the outskirts of Sirnak. The mayor here was recently arrested and replaced by a state “trustee,” one of more than 80 elected Kurds who have recently been replaced by government edict. Unlike in Sirnak or Cizre, tanks did not fire on the village last year, or destroy its houses. As a result, it became a shelter for some of the estimated 500,000 people displaced by last year’s fighting. After sunset, and amid a power failure, I met with one family.

The father, a 53-year-old janitor, said they were from Sirnak. When the rebellion began in late 2015, he, his wife and their eight children fled to a different city. But their new landlord later needed their apartment for his own displaced family, so they moved to this village.fearing that both the security forces and Kurdish militants might harass them, they asked me not to use their names.

For months they lived in a shed, sleeping next to chickens and cows, before a neighbour found them a cleaner place to stay. In the meantime, their home in Sirnak was destroyed, along with much of the city centre.

As we spoke, the power came back on, allowing their youngest daughter to do her homework. “This room is for everything,” her mother said. “Studying, sleeping, eating.”

They say they resent both the insurgents, who prolonged a fight they were never going to win, and the state, which left three of their relatives buried in the rubble. “We’re trapped between two forces,” the mother said.

“Our lives are the lives of refugees,” the father added. “We’re just waiting.” NYT

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