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flamingdem

(39,319 posts)
Fri Nov 27, 2015, 12:48 PM Nov 2015

The battle for Turkey: can Selahattin Demirtas pull the country back from the brink of civil war?

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/oct/29/selahattin-demirtas-kurdish-turkey

The battle for Turkey: can Selahattin Demirtas pull the country back from the brink of civil war?

In the autumn of 1990, six years into the Kurdistan Workers party’s (PKK) insurgency against the Turkish state, a political activist named Vedat Aydin rose to his feet to address a human rights conference in the capital, Ankara. When Aydin began to speak, it was not in Turkish, the official language of the state, but Kurmanji, a Kurdish dialect that had for decades been effectively banned in public places. The result of this gesture was pandemonium. The moderator of the conference demanded that Aydin switch to Turkish; a fellow Kurd came mischievously onto the platform to translate. Around half those present walked out, and Aydin was detained by police and briefly jailed.

Eight months later Aydin was arrested again, back home in the city of Diyarbakir, in what is effectively the capital of Turkish Kurdistan. Two days after that, his mutilated body was discovered in the countryside outside the city.

Turkish security forces perpetrated thousands of extra-judicial executions of Kurdish activists in the 1990s – along with village clearances and torture on a massive scale – but few provoked the anger of ordinary Kurds more than the killing of the man who had achieved notoriety by standing up to the linguistic proscriptions of the state. On 5 July, 1991, the day of Aydin’s funeral, they came out in their tens of thousands in Diyarbakir.

Among the mourners that day was an 18-year-old local boy called Selahattin Demirtaş, the second son of a plumber and his wife who had given their seven children as stable an upbringing as they could manage in the dirt-poor regional capital.

To Tahir and Sadiye Demirtaş this had meant acquiescing to the official claim that all citizens of the country, bar a few tiny minorities, were Turks. It was only from school friends that Selahattin had learned of the existence of the Kurds, a people that had been living on the mountainous intersection of Mesopotamia and Asia Minor long before the first incursions by Turkish nomads in the 11th century. State propaganda and the collusion of his parents had left Demirtaş unsure as to whether he was a Turk or a Kurd. On 5 July all ambiguity was removed.
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The battle for Turkey: can Selahattin Demirtas pull the country back from the brink of civil war? (Original Post) flamingdem Nov 2015 OP
A civil war could fix a lot of what's wrong in Europe, Middle East and NATO Proserpina Nov 2015 #1
 

Proserpina

(2,352 posts)
1. A civil war could fix a lot of what's wrong in Europe, Middle East and NATO
Mon Nov 30, 2015, 07:39 AM
Nov 2015

by taking out that false friend, Erdogan, and his oily son.

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