1 March/April 2015 , Issue 1 | Volume 9 KHRAG NEWS KHRAG Kurdish Human Rights Action Group South Africa Volume 9 | Issue 1 | March/April 2015 www.khrag.org Editorial FORWARD WITH THE STRUGGLE Huge multitudes of Kurdish people gathered for Newroz celebrations in Ahmed (Diyarbakir) in Turkey on 21 March. See story on page three Peace process in Turkey moves up a gear A join statement by the Kurdish People’s Democratic Party and the ruling AKP has given new impetus to the peace process in Turkey. THE statement was issued last month (see full statement on page 4). This is the latest in a series of developments that have marked the on-off peace process that would seek to resolve the Kurdish question in Turkey and beyond. Following the collapse of the Oslo Peace Talks in 2011, Archbishop Desmond Tutu with the support of a number of Nobel Peace Prize Laureates and international leaders, in December 2012, made a call on the then Prime Minister of Turkey, Tayyip Erdogan and the PKK leader, Abdullah Ocalan, to resume the peace talks. The talks were resumed in January 2013 between the Turkish government and Ocalan. The talks resulted in a declaration on Newroz (21 March 2013) by Ocalan announcing a ceasefire and the unilateral suspension of the armed struggle and the withdrawal of the PKK armed guerillas from Turkey. The ceasefire has held since then. In September 2013, Erdogan reciprocated by announcing measures for a reform package that was aimed at kick-starting the peace process. This was followed in July 2014 by the passing of the legal framework, the aim of which was to legitimize the peace process and normalise the political situation in the country. In September 2014 ISIS, which was part of the coalition forces in Syria fighting the Assad regime and supported by the West and certain Arab countries attacked KOBANI, a Kurdish dominated enclave in Syria with heavy artillery, tanks and armoured vehicles which they had seized from the Iraqi army. The attack was repulsed by the Peoples Defence Units (YPD) and the Women’s Defence Units (YPJ) However the attack on KOBANI had negatively impacted on the peace process in Turkey and had resulted in the talks being stalled. There were rumours that the Turkish government was supporting ISIS, which they denied. However on 1 October 2014 a delegation from the HDP who had visited Ocalan in prison issued a press statement on behalf of Ocalan on the siege on KOBANI and the peace process. In the statement Ocalan emphasised that the reality of KOBANI and the Peace Process is indivisible. He affirmed that the ...Continued on page 2 THE struggle by the Kurdish people for self-determination is reaching a crucial stage. In Turkey, where the biggest group of Kurds live – some 20 million of the 40 million global Kurdish population – the prospects for a peaceful negotiated settlement are looking up. Last month, the HDP and the ruling AKP had a joint press conference and issued a joint statement on the elements of a peace process. For the last few years there has been an on-off peace process which included a unilateral ceasefire by the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) and legislation being passed in the Turkish parliament that provides a framework for peace talks. The expansion of ISIS to the Kurdish areas of Syria and Iraq stalled the peace process with the Kurds accusing Ankara of giving support to the Islamists. This the Turkish authorities vehemently denied. The celebration of the Kurdish New year had a distinctly political flavour as millions of Kurds gathered to express their cultural rights and assert their demands for full political rights. Newroz was celebrated across the Middle East and Europe and also in Cape Town, South Africa where the Kurdish Human Rights Action Group is based. The challenges are huge: political prisoners must be released, including Kurdish leader Abdullah Ocalan and exiles must come home. Anti-terror legislation must be scrapped and a new constitution has to be drafted and adopted. As in South Africa, there is likely to be a period of instability with antipeace forces trying to create havoc. The leadership of Turkey and the Kurdish movements have to manage the next phase skilfully in order that a just peace may ensue. As we at KHRAG have previously said; Peace will be hard to accomplish, but there is no other alternative. 2 Volume 9 | Issue 1, March/April 2015 Signature campaign supported across the world 10.4 MILLION PEOPLE DEMAND OCALAN’S RELEASE MORE than 10 million people worldwide have put their support behind a campaign to release Kurdish leader Abdullah Ocalan from a prison in Turkey. Ocalan, the leader of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) was abducted in Kenya in 1999 while he was heading to South Africa to seek political asylum. He was sentenced to death in Turkey for treason, a sentence which was later commuted to one of life imprisonment. He has been held on an Island prison Imrali, off the Istanbul coast, ever since. The international signature campaign went all over the world - to Africa, the Middle East, Asia, Australia, Latin America and the USA. The petition has also been signed by wellknown figures in the world such as Archbishop Desmond Tutu, philosopher Immanuel Wallerstein and Irish leader Gerry Adams, to name a few. The Kurdish Human Rights Action Group in South Africa started its own signature campaign on Human Rights Day in 2012 and collected thousands of signatures. KHRAG then joined the international campaign, which was spearheaded by The Freedom For Ocalan group, based in Cologne, Germany. The campaign calls for the release of Ocalan and for human rights for the Kurdish people. The Kurds have suffered various forms of oppression ever since Kurdistan was carved up by the British and French after the First World War. A long struggle for self-determination has been waged over many decades. The petition was handed over to the Council of Europe on Friday 13 February. Father Matt Esau, vice-chair of KHRAG, was present and describes what happened. “When we stood outside the Council of Europe on Friday 13 February 2015 at 10.30 on that cold autumn morning the determination of the Kurdish people who were there - some had walked for twelve days across Europe - was one of resolute determination”, he said. “In the continuing imprisonment of Mr Ocalan, in solitary confinement, the Council of Europe had failed the Kurdish people by taking no action to have Mr Ocalan released and removing him and the PKK from the ’Terrorist list,” he said. On Saturday 14 February between 50, 000 and 80,000 Kurdish people converged on the city of Strasbourg, France and marched about 5 kilometres to a sports stadium for a rally which started at 1pm and ended at 7pm. Included in the march were representatives from England, France, Germany, Brussels and South Africa. The rally was as clear as the day before, standing in their traditional clothing in the autumn sun, Kurds and their supporters danced and sang and called for the release of Abdullah Ocalan. Kurds and their supporters gathered in Strasbourg, France for a rally and to hand over a petition to the European Union. Addressing the crowd, Father Esau said; “We had Nelson Mandela in prison for 27 years. South Africans protested had rallies and support from the International community including the Kurdish people in calling for his release and the unbanning of our liberation movements. Nelson Mandela was imprisoned on Robben Island. So is Abdullah Ocalan imprisoned on Imrali Island! Nelson Mandela did not renounce his people! Abdullah Ocalan did not renounce his people he is still leading his people from Imrali. Nelson Mandela was released from prison after twenty seven years and he became the first President of a united South Africa. Abdullah Ocalan must be released now, 15 years is too long! He must be released so that he can be part of negotiating a new future for the Kurdish people and for Turkey. Release Ocalan now! Now is the time! ‘Ke na ko’ “ ...Continuation from page 1 peace process is still on track. He said that the priority is to frame a Road Map and an Action Plan to implement the terms of the Legal Framework adopted by the Turkish parliament in July 2014. In June 2014 the Chairperson of the Kurdish Human Rights Action Group led a factfinding mission to Turkey on behalf of the International Peace and Reconciliation Initiative (IPRI) on the status of the Peace Process. The Executive Summary and the Findings and Recommendations can be downloaded from the IPRI website: www.ipr-initiative. com The Report concludes as follows: “The successful conclusion of the peace process can also contribute to the democratization of the Turkish state and its society. It can have a positive and beneficial effect and impact on the neighbouring countries that are experiencing conflict and strife. The circumstances in the neighbouring countries dictate that Turkey finds a lasting solution to the Kurdish problem in Turkey to enable it to contribute to peaceful political solutions. Turkey cannot play a meaningful role in the Middle East whilst the Kurdish issue in Turkey remains unresolved. Let us resolve this issue for the common good of all.” On 28 February 2015 the HDP Imrali prison delegation who consulted Ocalan and representatives of the AKP government held a joint press conference on the peace process. Details on the statement including a 10 point programme put forward by the Kurds are contained in a story on page four. The joint press conference and statement by the Kurds and the Turks – the first after 40 years of conflict – represents a positive sign for the prospect of peaceful resolution of the Kurdish question. 3 March/April 2015 , Issue 1 | Volume 9 Newroz celebrated in Cape Town Millions around the world mark Kurdish New year KURDS across the world celebrated the Kurdish New Year on 21 March with greater vigour and in bigger numbers than ever before. In Diyarbakir, Turkey, the heartland of the Kurdish population, more than two million gathered for festivities. Newroz was also celebrated in Iran, Iraq, and Syria and across Europe where there are big expatriate Kurdish communities. Newroz has great cultural and social value and in recent years it has become an opportunity for Kurds to assert their demands for political freedoms. In Cape Town, the Kurdish Human Rights Action Group, working with local Kurds marked Newroz at the Cape Town Festival in the Company’s Garden and at Baran’s Kurdish Restaurant. Kurds Alina Jabbari and Cido Yildiz donned Kurdish outfits and distributed leaflets about the history of Newroz. Later, about 40 people from Haven night shelters enjoyed some Kurdish food and watched a movie at Baran’s. Many Kurds and their South African supporters joined in at both venues. The Kurdish New Year is celebrated during the spring equinox on 21 March. Newroz, the ancient annual festival, symbolises the triumph of light over darkness, the celebration of new life and freedom from oppression. Newroz dates back 5000 years. After the First World War, Britain and France partitioned Kurdistan, leaving the Kurds without a homeland. Since then, Kurds have been culturally and politically oppressed. As a result, Newroz was not openly celebrated until recently. Throughout Kurdistan and elsewhere, Newroz celebrations in a previous year Cido Yildiz, Elizabeth Schutter and Alina Jabbari in the Company’s Garden, Cape Town, South Africa, where Newroz was celebrated. The lit fires represent victory over evil millions of people gather each year to enjoy music, food, dance, and the opportunity to celebrate Kurdish cultural traditions. Others celebrate it as exiles from oppression far away from their oppressive homelands. This is year 2715 on the Kurdish calendar, which began with the mythology of the evil King Zahak, who killed children to cure a disease. Kawa, who had lost six sons to Zahak, went up to the king’s castle and slew him. People lit fires everywhere. For the Kurdish people, this story represents their oppression and liberation. Ever since, the lighting of the fires on the mountains has become a sign of freedom. This year the Newroz events take place in the shadow of the rise of ISIS in Kurdish areas in northern Syria and Iraq. But the Kurds will be inspired by the strength of their unity in action that has driven the aggressor back. Kurds will also be cautiously optimistic A bonfire burns during the Newroz celebrations this year that the imprisoned Kurdish leader Abdullah Ocalan could be free in the not so distant future as a negotiated peace becomes a distinct possibility. The celebration of Newroz this year will take place in a spirit of solidarity and hope that the Kurdish people will finally find peace and justice. In Cape Town, KHRAG invited people from Haven night shelters to participate in the celebrations. 4 Volume 9 | Issue 1, March/April 2015 Kurdish News Briefs UK presses terrorism charges against 18-year-old woman from Kurdish community WHILE the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) is still listed on UK’s list of ‘terrorist’ organisations, the government continues to criminalise Kurdish people within their own borders as well. Silan Ozcelik, an 18-yearold woman living in London is charged for possibly trying to join the Kurdish resistance against ISIS in northern Syria. It is claimed that the UK holds double standards when they praise the YPG and YPJ for their efforts and victory fighting ISIS, and arresting a young Kurdish Woman for joining YPJ. Further reading: http://www. independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/ silhan-ozcelik-disgusting-trial-for-youngwoman-who-tried-to-fight-againstisis-10105004.html Support grows for peace process The Objective Research Centre (ORC) based in Ankara claim that support for the reconciliation process increased from 54.3 percent to 67.5 percent. The ORC also surveyed the nation’s opinion on the presidential system that current President Erdogan aims to switch to. Further reading: http://www.dailysabah.com/kurdish-issue/2015/03/09/support-for-turkeys-reconciliation-processon-the-rise-poll-indicates Kurds are assisted by Syrian rebels in their fight against ISIS COMMANDER of Liwaa al-Tawhid said to ARA News: “We were waiting for the Kurdish forces to advance in order to fight by their side against ISIS terrorists.” This happened after the Kurdish fighters gained control over the Shuyoukh district (west of Kobane. Further reading: http://aranews. net/2015/03/syrian-rebels-to-assistkurds-in-fight-against-isis/ KHRAG Peace could be “propaganda tool” Demirtas warns Turkey may be using Kurdish peace process as election tool With the elections coming up in Turkey on 7 June, Demirtas (HDP) expressed his pessimism about the ruling party’s (AKP) attitude towards the Kurdish peace process, fearing that it will be used as a “propaganda tool”. “The government is in a mood like (the process) is done. The perception on disarmament is wrong. I do not think the AKP will take steps on democracy”. http://rudaw.net/english/middleeast/ demonstration three days after, in Diyarbakir. You can sign the petition calling for Ozgur’s release at: Turkish Justice Minister Bekir Bozdag: Release Kurdish journalist Ozgur Amed from prison. http://dissidentvoice.org/2015/03/ turkish-state-attempts-to-silence-thoseprotesting-its-massacre-of-roboskivillagers/ turkey/02032015 US responds positive on Ocalan’s call to lay down arms. ALTHOUGH the US, together with the European Union and Turkey, still considers the PKK to be a terrorist organisation, the State Department deputy spokesperson Marie Harf expressed that the US welcomes all steps in support of a peaceful resolution between the Kurds and the Turks. Because the move comes before key parliamentary elections and in the midst of an intense debate over the security bill, observers have expressed some concerns. The spokeswoman said that they will “certainly be watching” as there are still more details to be fleshed out that the US does not know about. http://www.todayszaman.com/diplomacy_us-welcomes-pkk-leaders-call-tolay-down-arms_374146.html Sign the petition calling for Ozgur’s release BECAUSE of his political activism on behalf of the Kurdish people, Kurdish journalist and writer Ozgur Amed has recently been sentenced to 3 years in prison. He was charged by the 7th Criminal High Court of Diyarbakir on: “committing an illegal organization crime while not being an illegal organization member”. On the 28th of December a Turkish war plane massacred 34 Kurdish civilians in the Roboski village, and Ozgur participated in a Office 4 & 5, St George’s Cathedral Building, 1 Queen Victoria Street, Cape Town 8000, SOUTH AFRICA email: admin@khrag.org web: www.khrag.org “To all women: develop self defence mechanisms and strongly resist male dominance” THE Kurdish Women’s Movement International Office issued a statement on International Women’s day calling upon women to protect and defend themselves. The statement further stressed that the attacks on women have enormously increased, in the Middle East through the savagery of ISIS, and increased due to the wars of the 21st century all around the world. “This revolution rising against inequality, sexism and violence of all types will grow in our day and continue to preserve the values of humanity”, added the statement. http://anfenglish.com/women/ women-need-self-defence-forces-morethan-ever To Donate KHRAG Nedbank Cape Town ACC No. 1009 9317 33 Branch Code. 100909
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