RudawAn Analysis of the Kurdish Killings in ParisThe news shocked not only the Kurdish community in Europe, but also in Turkey: On the night of January 10, the three Kurdish activists Sakine Cansiz, Fidan Dogan and Leyla Soyleme were found shot dead inside a Kurdish cultural center in central Paris. According to current information the women, who belonged to the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) were blatantly executed - with multiple head and neck shots. Kurdish sources also report the use of a silencer. All further evidence speaks of professionally-executed murders, especially as the building cannot be accessed easily from the outside.
A few hours after the discovery, French Interior Minister Manuel Valls said at the murder scene: "The three women were executed without a doubt. The French authorities will try as soon as possible to shed light on this matter." In front of the building, hundreds of Kurds gathered, many of them from the neighboring 10th district. They chanted slogans such as, "We are all the PKK" and "Turkey murderer, Hollande accomplice."
That utterance against French President Francois Hollande shows the difficult relationship between the French authorities and the Kurdish population. Under Hollande the persecution of Kurdish activists has been massively expanded, as part of the fight against terrorism and due to ongoing pressure by Turkey. During the past few months there were raids, arrests, and direct clashes between Kurdish activists and the French police, as well as with Turkish nationalists.
Turkey’s government spokesman, Huseyin Celik, openly claimed that the killings were due to "internal PKK conflicts " - and many Turkish media immediately picked up this reading. Celik did not address the fact that the Turkish secret service, MIT, as well as the "deep state" -- as Turks call the linkages between military, mafia and politicians -- often have carried out similar contract killings in Turkey during the past decades, usually with the help of Kurdish recruits.
The possible role of Hizbullahi Kurdi, a Turkish-Islamic terrorist group which aims to establishing an Iranian-style religious state in Turkey and has a record of targeting leftist Kurdish activists, cannot be discounted.
Many Hizbullahi followers fled to Europe in 2000 to re-organize themselves after an extensive crackdown on their organization by Turkish authorities. But after the 2002 elections the government significantly scaled back the arrests and was ready to listen to clemency appeals from convicted followers. In the 1990s, during the heaviest fighting in the Turkish-Kurdish conflict, the Hizbullahi group murdered hundreds of people.
Intelligence documents in Europe show that Hizbullahi Kurdi is still active there. In a mosque in Basel supporters and leaders from France, Germany and Switzerland meet on a regular basis. In Iraq, members had procured light handguns, explosives and anti-tank weapons. The Swiss D. Ali, a senior member of the mosque, is also one of Hizbullahi Kurdi’s top officials. Contacts with the Lebanese Hezbollah as well as with Iran are maintained through regular visits.
The group regards the leftist, secular PKK as a major barrier to its own religious movement in eastern Turkey, and sees the guerrilla movement as its main enemy.
The timing and position of two of the women within the Kurdish movement seems to be important: Cansiz was a co-founder of the PKK, and one of the other two victims was a representative of PKK-affiliated groups that has faced a crackdown both in Turkey and European countries.
There are other circumstance that also seem to counter the theory that the killings were due to "infighting." In a classified dispatch from 2007, the former US Ambassador Ross Wilson outlined a three-step plan to fight the PKK in Europe. The telegram, which was released by WikiLeaks, aims to increase pressure on EU partners in combating the PKK and thus "satisfy" the strategically important Turkish secret services. The goal was to dry up the money transfers from Europe to North Iraq and to “disable” leading PKK members in Europe through deportation to Turkey. One of the two main targets named in the document is the recently murdered Cansiz.
She was, according to the dispatch, deeply involved in the PKK structures and had a major role in the transfer of funds to the PKK. Thus, the death of Cansiz benefits first of all the intelligence agencies as well as international groups like Hizbullahi Kurdî.
The murders came after Ankara restarted direct talks with imprisoned PKK founder Abdullah Ocalan, reportedly to outline a roadmap to peace as well as a surrender of the PKK.
Hence, many Kurds interpret the murders as another sign that the Turkish military, as well as other anti-Kurdish groups, are not interested in a real solution to the "Kurdish question” and are playing a double-faced game. They assume that the only real aim is to destroy the PKK structures, which is confirmed by recent military actions as well as statements from various leading politicians. In December 2012 the Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said: "Either you decide to live like other people under the rule of this nation or you search for another country to live in. Or you can continue to hide in your caves. But be assured that we will find you, even in those caves."
Shortly after the announcement of the killings, reactions in the Kurdish community in Turkey ran high: Kurdish citizens in eastern Turkey called for demonstrations and boycotts of the public life. When the coffins of the slain women arrived in Diyarbakir tens of thousands of people gathered to commemorate them and chanted slogans in support of the PKK. This escalation comes at a particularly inopportune time and could cause the peace process to be stalled again.
Omer Guney – of Turkish origin but self-proclaimed Kurd and probably in his 30s - is now seen as the primary perpetrator of the killings by French police. After his arrest, the French intelligence service announced to the Turkish government that the incident was an "internal conflict" and that the detained suspect was close to the murdered women. Further information that recently surfaced paints a strange picture of Guney.
He suddenly appeared in the Kurdish Paris community around two years ago. He claimed that his mother was of Kurdish origin, later changing this claim to one of his father’s origin. Guney rose quickly in the ranks of the pro-PKK movement in Paris, though his flatmates had often had doubts about his real intentions. In his room he had numerous mobile phones, tried to convince his living mates to attend a local mosque with him and told conflicting accounts of his prior activities in Germany. It is only clear that he worked in a factory in Germany, and had close ties to Turkish Nationalist. His Facebook profile reveals that his cousin in Turkey posed with a Turkish police badge in a car and that he had links to a known ultra-nationalist Turkish journalist.
Furthermore, there are still numerous open questions and doubts as to the "internal conflict" theory. In 2012, the Belgian police warned high-ranking PKK members living in exile in Europe that they had uncovered an assassination plot against them and arrested several suspects. The information was also delivered to the French authorities and in response the French police set up closed circuit cameras near Kurdish facilities.
Moreover, the deputy prime minister of Turkey, M. Ali Sahin, has further fueled the rumors of a “deep state killing.” Referring to the killings, he said in a speech, “I fear that in the following days and weeks similar incidents may happen in Germany." Leftist German parliamentarians protested against Sahin’s remarks, calling it an “open threat against the Kurdish community in Germany.”
A comprehensive and transparent investigation of the killings has so far not been delivered. And it is unsure if all the details of the event will ever come to the surface.
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