Los Angeles Times

Turkey targets Kurdish politician­s

Crackdown on the opposition comes as a vote nears that could boost president’s rule.

- By Umar Farooq Farooq is a special correspond­ent.

ISTANBUL, Turkey — She is facing a potential sentence of 83 years in prison. The crime, some would say, is belonging to the political opposition that is under siege by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Figen Yuksekdag, cochair of the country’s leading pro-Kurdish political party, is among the most prominent targets of a massive legal assault on Turkey’s Kurdish opposition in the run-up to a vote on a constituti­onal amendment that could grant Erdogan sweeping powers.

The government has already stripped her of her seat in parliament for allegedly supporting the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party, or PKK. She stands accused in scores of other terrorism-related cases — as does her co-leader in the People’s Democratic Party, Selahattin Demirtas, who has been sentenced to five months in prison for “insulting the Turkish nation.”

Among Yuksekdag’s alleged crimes: delivering a speech in 2015 that lent support to Kurdish militias battling Islamic State in Syria and attending the funeral of a suspected leftist militant in 2012.

Using emergency powers in place since July last year, Turkey has jailed 13 lawmakers from the party, also known as the HDP, and more than 5,000 of its workers over alleged terrorism links. In the Kurdish southeast, where the party enjoys an electoral majority, more than 80 locally elected district government­s have been replaced by federally appointed caretakers, their former heads imprisoned.

In addition, dozens of news outlets have been shuttered, scores of journalist­s arrested, and art exhibits and cultural festivals have been banned for allegedly supporting the PKK.

The crackdown has gutted what was once touted as a political bloc that could help end the PKK’s four-decade-long insurgency, which has claimed 40,000 lives.

“The government is totally turning everything upside down,” said Ahmet Yildiz, the author of several books on Turkey’s Kurdish political movement and a researcher at the Istanbul-based Al Sharq Forum. “Some [of those accused] have affiliatio­ns with the PKK, but not all of them .... It all depends on how you define terror, and the government is using a political definition of terror.”

Up to 20% of Turkey is ethnically Kurdish, but the minority has long been subject to restrictio­ns on cultural expression, stoking tension that gave birth to a leftist separatist insurgency by the PKK in 1984, led by the now imprisoned leader Abdullah Ocalan.

Erdogan’s government enacted significan­t reforms, and the PKK agreed to a cease-fire in 2013. But the truce unraveled in 2015 after Turkey refused to militarily intervene in Syria on behalf of Kurdish militias who saw Ocalan as a figurehead and sought to carve out a separate state.

Erdogan views the Kurdish militias in Syria to be extensions of the PKK, which Turkey and the United States consider a terrorist group. In her 2015 speech, Yuksekdag said that although the government believed her party was “leaning on a terrorist organizati­on,” she saw no harm in supporting the militias, which have been the most effective foes of Islamic State in Syria.

She has defended her attendance at the 2012 funeral as an attempt to acknowledg­e the grief of mothers in her constituen­cy. Her supporters have pointed to a 2009 speech in which Erdogan ignited hope of a political solution to the PKK insurgency by speaking of the pain of mothers who lose their children. “Mothers have no ideology. Mothers have no politics, they are not rightists or leftists,” he said.

At the time he made those remarks, Erdogan had enlisted Kurdish opposition figures as mediators with the PKK’s head, Ocalan.

One such mediator was Ahmet Turk, a veteran Kurdish politician currently with the Democratic Regions Party who has lived through nearly three decades of what amounts to a revolving door between parliament and prison. He now doubts Erdogan ever sincerely wanted peace.

“Not Erdogan, not any of the government­s internaliz­ed the Kurds’ identity problems or their requests for education in their mother tongue,” said Turk, currently deposed from his job as mayor of Mardin and facing terrorism charges for alleged involvemen­t in a regional Kurdish confederat­ion inspired by Ocalan.

The accusation­s, Turk said, “are aimed at trying to make the Kurdish political movement fail. They are political decisions .... The government is nitpicking, they have no solid evidence.”

The case against Turk is centered on wiretapped phone recordings and a secret witness, the same kind of evidence used against Kurdish leaders under previous military-dominated government­s that have banned five pro-Kurdish parties in the nation’s history over alleged ties to terrorism.

Even Kurds who have usually been allies of Erdogan’s Islamist movement find themselves in the snare.

One of Erdogan’s most regularly touted political achievemen­ts is the lifting of a ban on women wearing head scarves. Huda Kaya, an HDP lawmaker who once faced the death penalty for protesting the ban, now finds herself being accused of terrorism for a speech that sought to bring attention to alleged abuses by the military in the southeaste­rn district of Diyarbakir.

When reports emerged of civilians dying as a result of a months-long curfew imposed as the military battled PKK militants, Kaya traveled to the area and gave a speech saying, “We are witnesses to the massacres here. We know very well who killed whom.”

Prosecutor­s are seeking to jail Kaya for up to 25 years for the statement, which they say “glamorized” the PKK’s narrative.

“There were dead bodies in the streets, left alone to rot because of a curfew,” Kaya said. “Neither in humanity nor in Islam is there any place for that kind of barbarity. I only went there to call for peace, and now I face accusation­s of being a terrorist.”

The accusation­s ‘are aimed at trying to make the Kurdish political movement fail. They are political decisions.’ — Ahmet Turk, veteran Kurdish politician

 ?? Bulent Kilic AFP/Getty Images ?? DEMONSTRAT­ORS rally in support of Figen Yuksekdag in Istanbul, Turkey. Yuksekdag, the co-leader of a pro-Kurdish party, faces terrorism-related charges. Turkey has jailed 13 lawmakers from her party and more than 5,000 of its workers over alleged...
Bulent Kilic AFP/Getty Images DEMONSTRAT­ORS rally in support of Figen Yuksekdag in Istanbul, Turkey. Yuksekdag, the co-leader of a pro-Kurdish party, faces terrorism-related charges. Turkey has jailed 13 lawmakers from her party and more than 5,000 of its workers over alleged...
 ?? Burhan Ozbilici Associated Press ?? YUKSEKDAG’S speech supporting Kurdish militias battling Islamic State in Syria angered Turkey.
Burhan Ozbilici Associated Press YUKSEKDAG’S speech supporting Kurdish militias battling Islamic State in Syria angered Turkey.

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