Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Mass Grave in Turkish Military Installation

A soldier who served in Semdinli Derecik Internal Security Brigade during 1994-1995 came out about an event in which 12 korucular (government paramilitary forces used against PKK and Kurdish people) were tortured, shot, and buried in a mass grave in the garrison.

The soldier even provided a schematic of the mass gave and alerted the prosecutor's office and spoke to Taraf daily. You can read the full article in Turkish.

The soldier stated that the commander of the brigade then was Lt. Colonel Ali Çamurcu, a known member of JITEM who is known to kill a lot of civilians after having them kidnapped.

The soldier who came out talks about the details of the encounter of how the korucular we tortured nonstop with allegations that they were helping the PKK while in fact they were not. The poor korucular were screaming for days that they were fighting against the PKK.

Some could say these 12 korucular met their demise but I feel sorry for them. Because the korucular are stupid enough to think that the fascist state will actually value them for betraying and killing their own people. The fascist regime will never forget that korucular betrayed their own people and so they can betray her too. That's why they have no value for the fascist regime.

A reporter has found the relatives of the killed and they described what happened. It appears that after a clash between the PKK and the military, the military raided the village, set the homes on fire, tortured people, beat up a pregnant woman and killed her baby, incinerated a person alive and took these 12 korucular to the military installation for torture and later killed them.

After the story hit the news construction work started in the military post where the mass grave is supposed to be located. It wouldn't surprise me though that the remains of the people have already been removed and incinerated. JITEM's professional killers have reported in the part that they were professional enough not to leave any body parts behind.

When the families of the "missing" complained, the government refused to investigate. Later when the matter was taken to the European Human Rights Court, Turkey simply said that the "disappeared" must have joined the PKK and the atrocities were committed by the terrorist organization.

It seems to me that Turkey conveniently omitted specifying the fact that the terrorist organization was the Turkish State.

Friday, July 17, 2009

Stop Military Operations and Solve Kurdish Question

From Bianet:
Parties of the left and NGOs have called for a democratic and peaceful solution to the Kurdish question.
Bawer ÇAKIR
bawer@bianet.org
Istanbul - BİA News Center
16 July 2009, Thursday

On Wednesday, 15 July, representatives of NGOs and political parties gathered in Galatasaray Square to call on the government to act.

Following the announcement by the militant PKK (Kurdistan Workers' Party) that they would extend their unilateral ceasefire until 1 September, the crowd called on the government to stop armed operations.

The group read out a press statement, and then handed out a flyer headed "Make your voice heard for peace".

Hüseyin Akçiçek of the Socialist Platform for the Oppressed (ESP) said in the statement that both the Turkish and the Kurdish people were paying the price for the ongoing 30-year war:
Denial and opportunism

"Those who meet the existence of a Kurdish people with denial and methods of destruction protect their own children, while not hesitating to send the children of the poor people into the war to die. They then use their dead bodies for their politics."

He added, "It is necessary to demand brotherly, equal and free coexistence of the people of Turkey in order to obstuct the games of those who want war."

He called on the "proletarian Turkish people to be aware of the game being played with their future" and to support the voices calling for peace and the Kurdish people's peace efforts.

As for the government, the statement called on the government to match the Kurdish demands for peace and the decision by armed groups to cease fighting with an end to operations.

"Yes, we believe that there are opportunities for a fair and honourable solution to the Kurdish question and for peace."

The protest was supported by the Democratic Society Party (DTP), the 78'ers Initiative, the Human Rights Association (İHD), the People's Houses (Halkevleri), the Socialist Labour Movement (SEH), the Labour Party (EMEP), the Socialist Democracy Party (SDP), the Freedom and Solidarity Party (ÖDP), the Socialist Party, the Labour Movement Party (EHP), the ESP, the Revolutionary Socialist Workers' Party (DSİP), the Social Freedom Platform (TÖP), the Teori ve Politika magazine, the KESK trade union confederation, Anti-Kapitalist, the Peace and Democracy Party (BDP) and the Free Democratic Alevi Movement. (BÇ/AG)
I am becoming more pessimistic day after day as I know very well that a fascist regime and people who have been brainwashed don't easily change.

Saturday, July 04, 2009

Common Cause

Serouj Aprahamian wrote a comprehensive piece titled Kurds and Armenians: Finding Common Cause. I will quote a few sections from the article but you should take time to read the full article:
Motivating Factors

There are two major underlying aspects behind the principle of solidarity. One is the moral aspect which considers freedom to be a social, rather than mere individual, pursuit. It is based on the belief that one can only truly be free when freedom becomes achieved for all others around them as well; for how can one truly be content and secure in their freedom if they are surrounded by suffering and injustice? This concept is perhaps best captured in Martin Luther King Jr’s famous quote, “Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.”

The other dimension for solidarity hinges on a more practical political calculation: the belief that by coming together with others around a common goal, one can help build a broader base of power and improve social conditions. Indeed, by pooling resources and manpower, movements which are able to collaborate with one another are logically much more likely to achieve victories. The smaller a group or movement is, the more central this consideration becomes in their hopes for pursuing justice.
Against the tactic of dividing a conquering which is perfected by Turkey against its minorities to facilitate cultural genocide, solidarity is the only way out:
Just as Turkish authorities once viewed Armenians’ call for equality and democracy as a “threat” to their empire, Ankara today interprets the Kurdish people’s demand for basic human rights as meaning “separatism.” Just as the Ottoman authorities refused to recognize the national identity of Armenians and called them “Christian Turks,” the Kurdish people have had to fight Turkey’s attempts to officially classify them as “Mountain Turks.” Just as they once did to Armenians, the Turkish government continues to suppress the language, history, and identity of Kurds; ransacks their schools and cultural monuments; bans their political parties and newspapers; pillages their towns and villages; terrorizes their families and children; subjects Kurds to a policy of Turkification; and attacks their human rights workers and journalists.
The solidarity of oppressed peoples of Turkey should not be limited to only Armenian and Kurdish peoples. But it's a start.