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 Turkey's Kurdish DTP party leader Nurettin Demirtas resigns

 Source :  AP | AFP | Agencies
  Kurd Net does not take credit for and is not responsible for the content of news information on this page

 


Turkey's Kurdish DTP party leader Nurettin Demirtas resigns  1.5.2008 



May 1, 2008

ANKARA, -- The state-run news agency is reporting that the leader of a pro-Kurdish party has resigned two days after he was released from jail.

Anatolia reports that Nurettin Demirtas, head of the Democratic Society Party, which faces closure for allegedly engaging in separatist activities, resigned as the party's leader Wednesday.

Demirtas is suspected of forging documents to avoid a mandatory military duty. He faces up to five years in prison.

He was drafted to into the army Tuesday, a day after a court-martial in the Turkish capital of Ankara released him after months in jail.        

Nurettin Demirtas, President of the pro-Kurdish DTP party, the only Kurdish party in Turkey.

Nurettin Demirtas, chairman of the Democratic Society Party (DTP), had been held since December on charges of obtaining false medical reports declaring him unfit for military service.

Late Monday, a military court decided to free Demirtas, 35, along with 51 others standing trial on similar charges. He risks up to 10 years in prison if convicted.

Demirtas, known as a Kurdish hardliner, was arrested on December 17, shortly after being elected DTP chairman, as part of a nationwide probe into a network of doctors and middlemen who provided false medical reports to draft evaders.

Demirtas, who is not a member of the parliament,
www.ekurd.net spent 12 years in prison between 1993 and 2005 for membership in the Turkey's Kurdistan Workers' Party PKK, the separatist Kurdish group that has fought the government since 1984.

The DTP itself is currently on trial before the Constitutional Court for alleged links to the PKK.

In November, Turkey's top prosecutor asked for his Democratic Society Party — which has 20 seats in Parliament — to be banned, accusing it of being "a focal point" of separatist activities. No hearing date has been set.

The Turkish authorities seek to ban the only pro-Kurdish DTP party, the DTP demanded more rights for the Kurdish minority and autonomy for the Kurds living in the mainly Kurdish southeast Turkey.

Turkey refuses to recognize its Kurdish population as a distinct minority. It has allowed some cultural rights such as limited broadcasts in the Kurdish language and private Kurdish language courses with the prodding of the European Union, but Kurdish politicians say the measures fall short of their expectations.

Since 1984 when the PKK took up arms for self-rule in the country's mainly Kurdish southeast of Turkey. A large Turkey's Kurdish community openly sympathise with the Kurdish PKK rebels.

The PKK demanded Turkey's recognition of the Kurds' identity in its constitution and of their language as a native language along with Turkish in the country's Kurdish areas, the party also demanded an end to ethnic discrimination in Turkish laws and constitution against Kurds, ranting them full political freedoms.

The PKK is considered a 'terrorist' organization by Ankara, U.S., the PKK continues to be on the blacklist list in EU despite court ruling which overturned a decision to place the Kurdish rebel group PKK and its political wing on the European Union's terror list.

Information for this report was provided by,  AP | AFP | Agencies

** Kurds are not recognized as an official minority in Turkey and are denied rights granted to other minority groups. Under EU pressure, Turkey recently granted Kurds limited rights for broadcasts and education in the Kurdish language, but critics say the measures do not go far enough.

The use of the term "Kurdistan" is vigorously rejected due to its alleged political implications by the Republic of Turkey, which does not recognize the existence of a "Turkish Kurdistan" Southeast Turkey.

Others estimate over 40 million Kurds live in Big Kurdistan (Iraq, Turkey, Syria, Iran, Armenia), which covers an area as big as France, about half of all Kurds which estimate to 20 million live in Turkey.

Turkey is home to 25 million ethnic Kurds, a large Turkey's Kurdish community openly sympathise with the Kurdish PKK for a Kurdish homeland in the country's mainly Kurdish southeast of Turkey.

Before August 2002, the Turkish government placed severe restrictions on the use of Kurdish language, prohibiting the language in education and broadcast media. The Kurdish alphabet is still not recognized in Turkey, and use of the Kurdish letters X, W, Q which do not exist in the Turkish alphabet has led to judicial persecution in 2000 and 2003

The Kurdish flag flown officially in Iraqi Kurdistan but unofficially flown by Kurds in Armenia. The flag is banned in Iran, Syria, and Turkey where flying it is a criminal offence" 

Southeastern Turkey: North Kurdistan ( Kurdistan-Turkey) wikipedia  

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