Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Woman to sue German state for failing to save daughter from PKK terrorists

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A TURKISH-GERMAN woman, who has been protesting her daughter’s recruitmen­t by the PKK terrorist group, is planning sue the German state for failing to bring back her daughter, she said yesterday.

Protesting in front of the Brandenbur­g Gate in Berlin, Maide T. told reporters that she and several other families, whose children were also recruited by the PKK, will be filing a lawsuit against Germany for failing to ensure their return. “We will sue the German state, which has not done anything to bring our children back. I will file the lawsuit with other families who are in the same situation,” she said, adding that six families have joined her so far. Maide T. urged other families to join their struggle. A Berlin resident, Maide has been trying to find her daughter, Nilüfer, since Nov. 12, when was kidnapped by the PKK. Yet, all her efforts seem to be in vain as German police refuse to help her. In late May, she called on Chancellor Angela Merkel to help her and held protests in front of the German Chanceller­y. The German government has failed to take any action, while Turkish officials criticize Germany for harboring and supporting PKK terrorists. Turkey has long urged German authoritie­s to take more serious measures against the PKK’s activities in the country. The PKK, which is classified as an “ethnonatio­nalist” and “separatist” terrorist organizati­on by the European Union law enforcemen­t agency, Europol, has been banned in Germany since 1993.

PKK supporters, howeverm have been allowed to hold rallies, recruit militants and collect funds in Germany, which is home to some 5 million people with Turkish origin, including Kurds. The PKK is still active, with nearly 14,000 followers among the country’s Kurdish immigrant population.

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