Смекни!
smekni.com

Turkish Occupation Of Northern Kurdistan Essay Research (стр. 2 из 2)

formed a political party. Their simple selfless goal was to obtain the God given

right of self-determination for the worthy Kurdish nation, which included out-

right independence from the Turkish mainstream government. The main leader for

this independence movement was a young political science student from the

Kurdish city of Urfa, named Abdullah Ocalan or Apo (Kurdish for Uncle). This

group of organizers were Marxist-Lenninst in ideology and adamantly stated that

the Kurds and Turks were separate people and hence forth, the Turkish military

force present in Kurdistan was a belligerent action of occupation of Kurdistan.

The P.K.K (Party Kereykarey Kurdistan or Kurdistan Workers Party) also called

for the abolishment of tribalism, feudalism, and the “slave-like dependence of

women.” A great amount of the P.K.K military force were female. The P.K.K also

believed the only way to attain freedom and independence were through violence,

much like the American and French revolution of mid 1700s.

To conceive the P.K.K as completely leftist is untrue, they have adapted the

Communist theme of ideology to counter-weight the Turkish entity as a NATO state,

so it is safe to assume that the P.K.K has chosen the Marxist path by default.

Similar to the American fore-fathers choosing a republic form of government to

resist the British form of government, and France choosing a parliamentary form

of government to overshadow the history of monarchical reign of France. This

might seem to be absurd, but not when you see a “democratic” Turkey that

espouses a contradictory nationalism and places signs everywhere in Kurdistan

that says, ” Proud is He who calls oneself a TURK” or ” A TURK is worth the

whole universe(Kendal).” So accordingly, underneath all the ideology and

propaganda of the Cold War, what you essentially have is two combating

nationalisms.

The 1980 coup mentioned earlier pretty much halted all of P.K.K’s political

activities and other similar left-wing organizations. But the P.K.K’s political

politburo immediately regrouped in Syria and Lebanon. With help from some

neighboring countries, the P.K.K was able to launch small raids into Turkey in

1984. After the attacks grew in strength and number, the Turkish government

became seriously alarmed. The P.K.K was as violent as it advertised, many times

killing Kurds collaborating with the Turkish government. This didn’t raise their

popularity with the local populous. But, one thing they did accomplish was that

no other party or group in Turkey ever did, was the recognition of a Kurdish

problem in Turkey and a recognition of a Kurdish people in Turkey (Gunter). Thus,

the Kurdish situation was brought out to the international arena for the whole

world to witness the ever dynamic predicament in Northern Kurdistan. The Kurds

went from “Mountain Turks” to a “Kurdish reality in Turkey.” The Turkish army

then extended martial law to thirteen provinces in Eastern Turkey. The Turkish

army chief of staff admitted that “condition of war…exists in southeast

Turkey(Smyth).”

The P.K.K then began to adopt a less hostile attitude towards the civilian

population, realizing they can not operate without the help of the people. While

the P.K.K ceased to attack civilians, the Turkish army’s attitude towards

Kurdish civilians took an even harsher tone. What happened in the days of

Attaturk, were being implemented once again. It was like the situation was

dorment for forty-five years, and once again it came back to live. Amnesty

intentional reported the wholesale arrest and torture of Kurds in all parts of

Turkey. The entire village of Sirnak, population 25,000, was demolished and it’s

inhabitants forced to flee(Pilger). In all the Turkish army has destroyed an

estimated 1,700 Kurdish villages and towns(Montalbano). The P.K.K has

successfully begun to infiltrate larger cities and organizing merchant strikes

and mass protest against the Turkish government. The Turkish army and secret

police reacted by covert assassinations and “death squads” that killed anyone

that was even remotely linked to the P.K.K. These death squads have even killed

journalists who have reported the Turkish atrocities in Northern Kurdistan.

Turkey has the highest death rate for journalists in the world, even exceeding

Bosnia and Tadjikistan. Many pro-Kurdish politicians and human rights activists

have been killed, causing mass protest from the Kurdish population, even the

protest control police open fire on unarmed civilian protesters, killing

hundreds of men, women, seniors, and children indiscrimenantly(Kendal). The

state sanctioned DEP (People’s Democratic Party), a legal political entity was

forcibly closed down after their top political representatives were mysteriously

assassinated, their newspaper affiliates (Ozgur Daily) bombed, and it’s

parliamentarians arrested. All of these went against the established Turkish

constitutional laws. The lifting of Parliamentary immunity is a direct violation,

but when it comes to using illegal laws against Kurdish civilians there are no

limits.

Needless to say, the brutal and genocidal acts of the Turkish government have

only fanned the flare of the Kurdish drive for independence. In some parts of

Turkey, over ninety percent of the people support the P.K.K(Marks). When the

people see the government burning their houses, farms, and family members how

can one really support the establishment? How can the people believe the

government when they have publicly broken parliamentary laws by arresting

Kurdish parliamentary members for speaking Kurdish? The people has two choices,

the foreign occupiers or their sons, brothers, daughters, sisters, or fathers.

In response to the “ethnic cleansing” and martial law, the Turkish government

has also stationed over 450,000 troops in the area, backed by US made modern

tanks, Apache helicopters, Super Cobra helicopters, F-16 fighter jets, and

50,000 elite contra-rebels in the Kurdish region. Many generals in the armed

forces have openly talked about using chemical weapons on the Kurds (Turkey used

chemical weapons on the Kurds in the 1930s, British used it in the 1920s, and

Saddam Hussien used it in 1988)(Kendal).

Turkey has went as far as raiding Iraqi Kurdistan with the air planes given to

them by the US. As recently as March 20, 1995, Turkey invaded Iraqi Kurdistan.

They said the invation was to search for and destroy the P.K.K, but in actuality

the army couldn’t fight the P.K.K. The 35,000 invading force did little more

then destroying civilian villages, killing civilian Kurds, and ruining farm

crops. UNHCR (United Nations Higher Commission for Refugees) reported that

10,000 Turkish Kurds, who escaped Turkey’s systematic burning and destroying

Kurdish villages were forcibly detained and forced to return to Turkey. The

whereabouts of the refugees are unknown; knowning the Turkish track record,

their hopes are dismal.

Abdullah Ocalan

It now appears that the P.K.K has ascertained itself as the voice of the Kurdish

people, after seventy years of unrelenting oppression. The P.K.K’s unequivical

insistence of independence is rebuffed by Ankara, who state that everyone in

Turkey is equal and there are no room for minorities in Turkey. The army, an

organization who operates independently from the political wing of Turkey, will

not even placate a hint of even a form of diminutive local autonomy for the

Kurdish people. The P.K.K is exhibiting, and for their part proving to the

Kurdish masses that their violent way is the only avenue for any form of Kurdish

independence. Since the creation of the irredentent Turkish state the Kurds have

not received anything more then a tombstone with a forced Turkish surname. The

P.K.K has given 15,000 martyrs in the span of eleven years (Marcus), the army

has massacred more then 1,500,000 in the span of sixty years , more the 1,500

villages destroyed, every form of Kurdish identity denied, and their politicians

and journalists killed by secret police. After all it is the US constitution

that has written:

” When in the course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to

dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another, and to

assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which

the laws of nature’s God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of

mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the

separation…..whenever any form of government becomes destructive of these

ends, it is the right of the people to alter it, or to abolish it, and to

institute a new government..”

It is the very example the United States has set, that the Kurdish people

wants to declare their independence. For, the only thing different between the

Kurdish revolution and the U.S one, is only two hundred and nine years. All

oppressions are bad, all occupations are wrong, every nation has the right to

decide their own fate.