Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Pelosi criticized over ‘worrisome’ anti-Turkey remarks

- ANKARA / DAILY SABAH

FOREIGN Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu yesterday criticized U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s anti-Turkey remarks in a speech she recently made against President Donald Trump. Pelosi’s remarks came only a month after Democratic presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden’s anti-Turkey comments resurfaced, drawing serious criticism about U.S. interferen­ce in other countries’ democracy. “@SpeakerPel­osi’s rise to become Speaker of the House is what is truly worrisome for American democracy, given her blatant ignorance. You will learn to respect the Turkish people’s will,” Çavuşoğlu said in a tweet. Pelosi told Trump recently that he is not in North Korea, Turkey or Russia and that he needs to accept the results of the upcoming presidenti­al elections after he said he would not accept defeat. “You are in the United States of America, it is a democracy, so why don’t you just try for a moment to honor your oath of office, to the Constituti­on of the United States?” Pelosi said.

FAMILIES whose relatives and children were abducted by the PKK gathered on Thursday in front of the pro-PKK Peoples’ Democracy Party’s (HDP) provincial building in southeaste­rn Şırnak.

Emine Üstek, who came to protest the abduction of her son Metin Üstek, stressed that she would demonstrat­e every Thursday as long as her health allowed.

“They should bring my son from wherever he is. I come here to demand my child, and I will continue to come,” Üstek said.

“No one other than the HDP has given my child to them (the PKK). My son was taken by them to the mountains. How else would children of the age of 13-14 know the way to the mountains?” she said.

Fellow protester Zehra Güngör, whose 12 relatives were killed by the terrorists in 1987, said the HDP could not be the defender of Kurds as it was “the political extension of the PKK, which shed the blood of Kurds and burned children and pregnant women alive.”

Besna Katar, whose husband was abducted 16 years ago, said he left the house to gather wood and she never heard from him again.

Saying that she later learned that her husband was taken by the PKK, Katar continued: “We do not know if he is dead or alive. I am here to get news of him. I want my husband back from the HDP because they have a hand in the PKK’s abductions of our children and spouses.”

The families demonstrat­ing in front of the building later dispersed.

The protests in Şırnak are another version of the ongoing protests at the HDP headquarte­rs in the southeaste­rn city of Diyarbakır.

The Diyarbakır protest, which has been ongoing for more than a year, started when Hacire Akar turned up at the doorstep of the headquarte­rs one night after her son was abducted by the PKK.

The HDP, long facing public reactions and judicial probes over its ties to the PKK, is under pressure from this growing civilian protest movement. Various groups from around Turkey have supported the Kurdish mothers in their cause, with many paying visits to show their support.

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