AHAH you must read other post I wrote to see that I am not diplomatic at all! So when I say something nice I mean it
which other post would that be?
anyway, to business:
tomjez writes:
HADEP was forbidden by turkish state, with the help of PKK who did not like the idea of a democratic non PKK organization. HADEP was torpedoed by PKK, and DEHAP was created instead. 31 June 1996, second general assembly of the HADEP (arrested), some guys brought a PKK flag on the tribune. Bozlak and other were arrested, but not the provocators...weird?
not weird at all, considering that anyone can carry a PKK flag, including a grey wolf. so HADEP was accused of and banned for alleged "separatism" and "supporting terrorism" because of alleged support for PKK which HADEP has always denied. given the turkish state track record on all things kurdish, i am inclined to be extremely skeptical of charges brought by the turkish state and bringing into the picture the element of waving a PKK flag at a HADEP meeting is merely frosting on the cake. too much frosting, a telltale signature of the ham-handed approach to kurds that characterizes kemalism. . . and the provocateurs were not arrested, you say? case closed. the state is guilty.
ALL mayors elected on the HADEP list in 1999 were removed in 2004 for the municipal elections.
I don't suppose this might have had anything to do with the fact that in 2003, DEHAP changed it's platform, whereby it declared its intention to no longer be a party advocating for greater kurdish rights in turkey but will, instead, be a party of all turks. it also stated its intention to enter into alliances with other parties. therefore, is it any surprise that DEHAP sought and created an alliance with SHP? since it had stated its intention to enter into alliances with other parties in the previous year, how is it a surprise, alleged PKK manipulations and provocations notwithstanding?
additionally, since it no longer stood for advocating greater rights for kurds in turkey, why should anyone vote for a previous kurdish party that had formed an "alliance with an insignificant turkish party, SHP?" why not instead try to rally support for a larger party, i.e. AKP, which at least would have the ability to ensure greater state support for improving infrastructure and social services? if you are between a rock and a hard place with respect to political aspriations, you do what people do the world over--
you vote for the lesser of two evils in order to try to get something out of the bad situation. in saying this i do not mean that AKP has done anything significant in improving the lives of kurds living in turkish-occupied kurdistan, but it seems completely reasonable to me that the voters
hoped they would get something.
except for my comment about "alleged PKK manipulations and provocations," you may have noticed that in the preceeding paragraphs i did not mention PKK specifically as being involved with DEHAP or the DEHAP/SHP alliance. this is because the election results can be explained without the usual kemalist-driven PKK hysteria. of course, i had the advantage of listening to professor nicole watts, of san francisco state university, speak about this election. she was an observer of the campaign and actual elections in amed. she travelled with osman beydemir on his campaign trail and she indicates that beydemir was also "very popular." she quotes radikal: "Indeed, the soft-spoken, 33 year-old Baydemir, an ethnic Kurd and a lawyer by training, was considered such a sure winner that Radikal, one of the country's national dailies, opined that there was "no need to have an election" in Diyarbakir."
http://www.globalpolicy.org/nations/sov ... kkurds.htmDEHAP itself never earned immunity from harassment by the turkish state--
in spite of it's change in platform and rhetoric. i could say the same for PKK, even though it also shows a pattern of evolution over time, despite what its most implacable critics claim. The funny thing is that DEHAPs changes reflect PKKs policy changes as it moved through its KADEK phase and into its KONGRA-GEL phase. odd? proof of collaboration between DEHAP and PKK? well, so what if DEHAPers and PKKers are talking together and sharing ideas? i have stated before that i do not believe that PKK can be excluded from a political solution and i believe that. if you followed professor watts' article which i referenced above, you will notice that she mentions the devotion of the youth to PKK and that youth make up a large proportion of the kurdish population in turkish-occupied kurdistan. how will anyone cut out a generation from the political process, unless it is by time-tested kemalist methods of armed force, murder, disappearances, etc?
what does it mean that the youth of turkish-occupied kurdistan are supportive of PKK? it means they are polarized and radicalized by the actions of the turkish state, especially over the last twenty years, and they see PKK as being the only power to confront the injustices. this generation is here to stay and they are going to become the political players of the future. this guarantees that there will have to be a dialog between those who see something meaningful in PKKs existence and those who follow the knee-jerk reaction of the terrorist label. whether or not that dialog fully enters the political realm or remains illegal, but still fueling the fires of kurdish ambition "underground" is something that remains to be seen.
does this mean that i approve of everything PKK has done or with all of its policies? no, i do not, and i thought in my response to Nistiman that fact was fairly clear because i was in agreement with what Nistiman had to say, including the caveat about criticisms of PKK policies but not those policies centering on the issue of the use of violence.
nor do i approve of the wholesale condemnation of PKK especially since the most grievous offenders are, in fact, the most grievous offenders, i.e. the turkish state, the us state department, and the supporters of both. these are the ones who continually hold up the long-suffering, peace-loving turkish state as eternal victim while, at the same time,
never managing a single mention of the atrocious behavior of the same long-suffering, peace-loving turkish state which created a need for an organization like PKK to begin with. just take a look at the behavior of the turkish state in the 1960s and 70s alone, to see how perfectly they created the vacuum into which PKK could freely flow
because there was a need for kurdish self-defense against a genocidal regime. i simply cannot take seriously
anyone who condemns PKK outright without condemnation of the turkish state or an acknowledgement of the behaviors of the turkish state which created this whole ugly situation for kurds, and that includes all the so-called "experts."
here i am only scratching the surface in my complaint because i have not gone into the question of the
moral obligations and responsibilities of the state to those a state claims as its citizens. i believe that any such question is intimately linked to the question of the morality, legitimacy and
obligation of a people to defend itself.
((by the way, the comments of murat karayalcin vis-a-vis barzanî and talabanî are typically turkish. more finger-pointing and use of the blame game for one's own failure. perhaps both DEHAP and SHP were hoping that their alliance would hearken back to the days of the DEP/SHP alliance. but those were the long-gone days when SHP was one of the leading turkish parties. i guess that, in between fighting each other and fighting PKK in the south, barzanî and talabanî were working overtime at eroding SHPs relevance to turkish voters in turkey as part of some worldwide kurdish conspiracy. i bet murat karayalcin also believes that ufos are filled with little green men from mars.))
which brings me to your opening comment:
I agree with a lot of your points, but once again I disagree with the opportunitty of an armed struggle in Turkey.
when, may i ask, do you agree with the opportunity of an armed struggle by kurds? i will also point out, as an aside, that your statement still avoids Nistiman's core issue, the legitimacy of armed struggle. what is the point of the legitimacy of armed struggle in the abstract? what is the point of discussion of a "democratic solution and purely political game" for those who have not had time to breathe, much less consider such abstractions? which is the question that brings me back from this little aside to your comment about opportunity.
to quote a famous rabbi: if i am not for myself, who is? if i am only for myself, what am i? and if not now, when?
i admit that when operations did once again resume, i asked, "why now?" i suppose i asked this because so much was happening at the time--spring 2004--with the serhildan in syrian-occupied kurdistan, elections in turkish-occupied kurdistan, everything in liberated kurdistan. on the other hand, PKK had declared a ceasefire, waited for five years while announcing ahead of time that the ceasefire would end at a certain time. . . december, 2003, if i remember correctly. . . and then didn't really start operations again until the spring of 2004. so turkey got a one-sided grace period to go along with a one-sided cease fire. the PKK laid down its weapons in 1999. the pashas lifted military law in 2002. ample time has existed to engage politically and democratically on the part of ankara, but what happened? nothing. no dialog. no improvement of infrastructure. no improvement of social services. no program to return those villagers who were forced to flee their destroyed villages. no attempt to create jobs for the millions who fled to the cities and now live, in many cases, below the subsistence level.
thus the rabbi's question, ". . . if not now, when?"
i have seen a report this week which states that many have been graduated from a PKK military academy and they are projecting many new recruits for the next year. certainly, this may be propaganda--or may not--but it contains one huge kernel of truth which i have observed: the lack of economy, the
lack of a decent means of survival which would be consistent with kurdish culture in turkish-occupied kurdistan. PKK can obviously feed recruits, clothe them and give them work. as long as this situation remains, PKK will have as many recruits as it can handle. who knows? maybe they'll be back to their former personnel levels fairly soon.
It looks like PKK is giving the rabbi an answer.
That should give Ankara. . . and the EU. . . something to think about.