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  • Bullet-riddled body of child casts shadow over Turkey's EU aspiratio

    Bullet-riddled body of child casts shadow over Turkey's EU aspirations
    By Meriel Beattie in Kiziltepe, Turkey

    The Independent
    06 April 2005

    With his small face, framed by the broad white Peter Pan collar
    worn by schoolchildren throughout Turkey, Ugur Kaymaz looks even
    younger than 12. His wide, dark eyes stare out of a black-and-white
    photograph, sellotaped to the windscreen of his father's truck where
    the pair died in a hail of gunfire last November. The truck hasn't
    moved since, parked by the roadside in Kiziltepe, a rundown town on
    the troubled road to Iraq and Syria. The caption under the photograph
    reads: "People won't forget you."

    With Turkey bent on joining the European Union, the bloody conflict
    with its Kurdish minority is one that Ankara would like forgotten. But
    there has been a resurgence in fighting. This week the army said that
    it had killed nine "Kurdish rebels" in five days of clashes.

    With Brussels watching, the bullet-riddled body of a child is
    proving hard to explain. Four policemen are on trial accused of the
    extra-judicial killing of Ugur and his father and then planting a
    large rifle in the boy's small hands.

    The handling of the Kaymaz killings has become a test case, at home and
    abroad, for Ankara's willingness to rein in its feared security forces,
    particularly in the embattled Kurdish villages of the south-east.

    "Even though the laws are changing, the people who are supposed to
    implement those laws in daily life are still working in the same old
    way," said Huseyin Cangir, the head of the Human Rights Association
    and the Kaymaz family lawyer. "Turkey is trying to be a law-based
    state. But what we still have is a police state."

    The government of Recep Tayyip Erdogan has scrapped the death penalty,
    abolished the notorious state security courts and cut the time allowed
    for detention without trial.

    Kiziltepe's mainly Kurdish residents have been traumatised after years
    of armed conflict. The Kaymaz family had to leave their own village
    because of the fighting. Ugur's father, Ahmet, had been detained
    at least twice on suspicion of supporting the militants. He had no
    proven links to the PKK.

    With unemployment high, Ahmet, like many men here, made his money
    transporting oil between northern Iraq and the Turkish refineries.

    On the evening her son and husband died, Makbule said it was already
    dark and she was putting out the plates for dinner. Ahmet, who was
    getting ready for another oil run, needed to carry his duvet and
    other things for the trip over to the truck - and Ugur went with him
    to help. Then she heard noises.

    "When I looked for a second from our gate, I could see Ugur," she
    says. "I recognised his white trousers. Policemen were forcing him
    down, pushing him to the ground.

    "When we heard the gunfire, I took all the children and went to our
    neighbour's. And then after a while a lady, the state prosecutor,
    came in and said "My condolences," but I didn't understand what was
    going on. They didn't say then that they'd killed Ahmet and Ugur. We
    couldn't believe that they had died. One of them was a truck driver,
    the other a schoolboy. Why would they do that?"

    The official versions of what happened are quite different. The police
    say they were acting on a tip-off that a PKK attack would be launched
    from the Kaymaz house on a passing military convoy. Initially the
    shootings were described as a "clash" in which the police claimed they
    returned fire after father and son started shooting. That version was
    later changed to say that they were killed after ignoring an order
    to stop.

    Immediately after the incident, the provincial governor Temel Kocaklar
    denounced Ahmet and Ugur Kaymaz as "terrorists".

    In the past that would have been the end of it. Then Ahmet Tekin
    intervened. A teacher at Ugur's school, he was asked by police to
    identify the two bodies.

    Remarkably in a community which has learnt to keep its mouth shut,
    Mr Tekin has talked openly of the policemen's initial disbelief when
    he told them Ugur's name and age - a reaction interpreted by the
    family's lawyers to suggest they had actually come for someone else.

    More significantly, it is Mr Tekin - one of the few people to see the
    weapon lying next to Ugur's body - who has repeatedly emphasised the
    absurdity of the idea that he could have carried such a large gun.

    Then something unprecedented happened - in a country where abuse of the
    Kurdish minority is overlooked - the public got interested. Photos of
    Ugur soon appeared in the papers, incensing public opinion. Journalists
    seized on autopsy reports that nine of the bullets in Ugur's back
    had been fired from just 50cm. A parliamentary commission criticised
    the security forces. The Prime Minister weighed in, criticising the
    governor's description of the child as a terrorist. Four of the police
    involved were suspended. A date was set for a trial.

    That momentum may now be fading. By the time the trial opened, all four
    policemen had been reinstated and reassigned to other districts. The
    Kaymaz family lawyers claim that the public prosecutor has watered
    down the case.

    Ahmet's brother Resat, said: "If you don't make people here feel
    secure, what will these children do when they grow up? They go to
    the cities and become pickpockets. Or they join the PKK."
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