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Kurdish lawmaker Leyla Zana: I told the
Turkish PM to resume the Oslo talks
2.7.2012
By Ekurd.net staff writers |
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Turkey's Prime Minister Recep
Tayyip Erdogan, left, meet with Leyla Zana, an independent Kurdish
lawmaker from southeastern Kurdish city of
Diyarbakir (Northern Kurdistan), in Ankara, Turkey,
Saturday, June 30, 2012 Turkey's prominent outspoken
Kurdish rights advocate Leyla Zana, former
Kurdish MP in Turkey Zana spent a decade behind bars
(between 1994 and 2004) in Turkey for speaking
Kurdish in the Turkish Parliament after taking her
parliamentary oath. She was the first Kurdish woman
to be elected to Turkey's parliament. Photo:
AP
Turkish PM: We will continue
our fight
July 2, 2012
ANKARA, — Turkey's prominent lawmaker and
outspoken Kurdish rights advocate, an Independent
deputy, Leyla Zana on Sunday outlined the contents
of the
meeting she
held on Saturday with Turkish Prime Minister Recep
Tayyip Erdoğan. Zana said it is "unrealistic" to
solve the Kurdish issue by asking Kurdish militants
to lay down their arms, ANF news agency reported.
Zana pointed out she told the PM the armed conflict
is an open wound and cannot be healed by calling on
the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) to lay down arms
or asking the Turkish army to stop military
operations.
"I told the prime minister - said Zana - that the
people who asked for an apology were not the people
of a foreign state but were citizens of this
country."
Zana also rised with Erdoğan the possibility to
transfer imprisoned PKK leader, Abdullah Öcalan to
house arrest.
The Kurdish MP added she told the Prime Minister to
continue the so called Oslo process (from the place
where members of Turkey’s intelligence agency and
representatives of the PKK held talks).
Meanwhile the AKP group meeting in Ankara took place
after Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s meeting
with Leyla Zana on the Kurdish issue on Saturday
afternoon. Neither Zana nor Erdoğan made a statement
to the press after the meeting but at his party's
meeting the Prime Minister used his usual language
when speaking about the Kurdish issue, ANF reported.
Erdogan, referring to the PKK, said that “The
Turkish state is ready to do what needed to be done
against the circles that tolerate the organization.”
Erdogan, declaring the PKK as “enemy of both Turks
and Kurds”, threatened the movement underlining that
the fight against terrorism will neither take a step
back nor end. “I believe the organization’s most
recent attacks have revealed its hostility against
the Turkish state and nation. We will continue to do
what is needed to be done against the circles that
support and aid this organization which is clearly
also an enemy of my Kurdish brothers and sisters”,
underlined Erdoğan.
Zana, who in 1995 won the European Parliament's
Sakharov human rights award, and several other Kurds
were elected to parliament in 1991, but lost their
seats in 1994 after their party was outlawed for
links with the PKK.
Zana and three colleagues spent 10 years behind bars
for collaborating with the rebels. They were
released in June 2004.
Zana and her colleagues were first sentenced to 15
years in jail in 1994 for membership of the Turkey's outlawed
Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) which has been
fighting a 26-year bloody campaign for Kurdish
self-rule in the country's southeast.
In March 2003,www.ekurd.net
Zana and her co-defendants were
allowed a retrial after their original conviction
was condemned as unfair by the European Court of
Human Rights in 2001. She was released in 2004 after
Turkey's appeals court overturned her conviction.
Leyla Zana, the symbol of peaceful strife of the
Kurdish people, was
granted the Italian honorary
nationality in Rome on October 23, 2008.
Zana received a two-year prison sentence from the
Diyarbakir 6th High Criminal Court on the grounds of
a speech made at the Newroz celebrations in 2007
(traditional Kurdish festival to mark the beginning
of the Iranian New Year and the arrival of spring).
She was sentenced for saying "The three leaders of
the Kurds Jalal Talabani, Massoud Barzani and Abdullah
Öcalan".
Zana stood trial once more under charges of
"praising crime and criminals" based on her defence
in the case mentioned above. The Diyarbakir 6th High
Criminal Court acquitted the politician.
Former DEP MP Zana received a prison sentence of one
year and three months based on a speech she had
given at a seminar held by the School of Oriental
and African Studies in London on 24 May 2008. Zana
was convicted of "propaganda for an illegal
organization". In her speech, she had likened the
PKK and its imprisoned leader Abdullah Öcalan's
importance to the Kurdish people to the importance
the brain and heart have to humans. "They have
created a new life for the Kurdish people, so that a
people that used to be ashamed of its existence
gained a spirit of freedom and resistance."
On 4 December 2008, Zana was sentenced to
imprisonment of ten years by the Diyarbakir 5th High
Criminal Court under allegations of "spreading
propaganda for the PKK" in nine different speeches.
The court voiced the opinion that "the defendant's
activities over all reached the dimension of
membership of the PKK/Kongra-Gel terror
organization". The decision included Zana's
deprivation of the right to vote and to be elected
and several other political rights.
On July 28, 2009 Zana
was sentenced to 15 months in prison for remarks upholding Kurdish PKK rebels
fighting the Turkish government. On
December 4, 2008
sentenced to 10 years' imprisonment for praising PKK
On May 24, 2012, a Turkish court
sentenced Leyla
Zana to 10 years in prison in absentia for
membership of an outlawed separatist group and
spreading its propaganda. Leyla Zana was convicted
by a judge in southeastern Diyarbakir of having
violated the penal code and the anti-terror law in
nine different speeches.
Since it was established in 1984, the PKK has been
fighting the Turkish state, which still denies the
constitutional existence of Kurds, to establish a
Kurdish state in the south east of the country, sparking a conflict that has claimed some 45,000
lives.
But now its aim is the creation an autonomous
Kurdish region
and more cultural rights for ethnic Kurds who
constitute the greatest minority in Turkey,
numbering more than 20 million. A large Turkey's
Kurdish community openly sympathise with the Kurdish PKK rebels.
PKK's demands included releasing PKK detainees,
lifting the ban on education in Kurdish, paving the
way for an autonomous democrat Kurdish system within
Turkey, reducing pressure on the detained PKK leader
Abdullah Öcalan, stopping military action against
the Kurdish party and recomposing the Turkish
constitution.
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.
The PKK is considered ass 'terrorist' organization by
Ankara and 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.
Sources: Firatnews.com ANF | AFP | Reuters | Ekurd.net |
Agencies
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