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  • President Obama Misses Fundamental Kurdish Issues in Turkey

    OpEd News
    April 12 2009


    President Obama Misses Fundamental Kurdish Issues in Turkey

    by Matoska

    The recent visit of President Obama to Turkey and his speech to the
    Turkish parliament needs a response from American supporters of
    Kurdish parties and the Kurdish national movement within Turkey. When
    the President met with the Democratic Society Party (DTP) and other
    opposition parties, he got quite a different appraisal of Turkey's
    actions towards Kurds. Not mentioned in President Obama's remarks are
    the 250,000 Turkish troops deployed on the border of the Kurdish
    Autonomous Region. Not mentioned in President Obama's remarks is the
    arrest of Turkish Col. Cemal Temizoz for crimes against Kurdish
    peoples in the 1990s. While President Obama declared the continued
    U.S. support for the Turkish war against the PKK, thousands of Kurds
    demonstrated on the anniversary of Abdullah Ocalan's birthday and two
    more people were killed by the Turkish military.

    It is curious why President Obama chooses a militaristic, secular
    government to address the issue of the compatibility of the United
    States Government with Islam. Does he want to promote the AK's
    policies of desecularization of Turkish society? Is he aware of how US
    weapons supplied to Turkey were used against Kurds, a predominately
    Islamic population? It's as if someone failed to brief him that the
    U.S. government was the source of weapons for the massive Turkish
    military attacks on the Kurdish national movement.



    The flag of Turkey and the flag of the Kurdish nation

    Neither did President Obama mention the Kurds as a people worthy of
    international recognition after meeting with the DTP. " Ahmet Türk,
    leader of the pro-Kurdish Democratic Society Party, or DTP, said
    U.S. President Barack Obama advised his party that "violence or armed
    struggle will not solve the Kurdish problem." "I told him that we also
    denounce the violence. But I informed him that more than 17,000 extra
    judicial killings have happened in [southeastern Anatolia] over the
    years," the leader of the pro-Kurdish party said." While President
    Obama's statement briefly mentioned the impact of Turkish special
    courts, he omitted the forced relocations of 150,000 from 850 villages
    and the deaths of 40,000 people. Not mentioned by President Obama was
    the fact that between 1994 and 2003, Turkey took delivery of more than
    $6.8 billion in U.S. weaponry and services. And nowhere did President
    Obama commit to the implementation of Article 140 of the Iraqi
    Constitution to hold the Kirkuk referendum without Turkish
    interference.



    His statement read: "As president, and as a NATO ally, I pledge that
    you will have our support against the terrorist activities of the PKK
    or anyone else." Likewise, Abdullah Gul in an interview on Rudaw.net
    declared Turkey's intent to use any tactic to defeat the "terrorist
    organizations".euronews: "One new question is the Kurdish issue in the
    north of Iraq. Is Turkey prepared to give any ground over
    that?"Abdullah Gul: "To be able eradicate terrorist organisations you
    have to apply sophisticated programmes and plans ..and Turkey does
    that. Sometimes we do it in a public way.. sometimes behind the
    scenes."

    In this context, the Kurdish international conference in Erbil takes
    on a new significance. As the concept of a conference moves towards
    reality, the entire purpose of it is being changed. The issue of
    Kurdish unity is being changed to why the PKK must be dismantled. Some
    blogs have gone as far as to call it a disarmament conference. Leyla
    Zana put the issue succinctly at a Newroz rally: "Kurds are not in
    love with guns. Do not hurt us, we have been hurt enough [...]. Kurds
    will organise a conference among themselves and create their own
    model. Kurds have three large parties: the PKK, the KDP and the KYB
    (the latter two being the Kurdish Democratic Party led by Barzani, and
    the Kurdistan Patriotic Union led by Talabani)."

    President Obama failed to present the inequities of the Turkish
    Constitution in the context of the national, cultural and political
    rights of Kurds. The PKK arose from the history of Turkey's denial of
    rights to Kurds and continued because of Turkey's reliance on American
    weaponry to suppress the Kurdish uprising. But President Obama could
    not make the minimal concession of recognizing the Kurds as a people,
    not to mention the potentially politically explosive alternative of
    acknowledging their history as a nation. Instead, President Obama used
    the expression " the Kurdish population here inside Turkey". In a like
    manner, President Obama could not bring himself to mention the word
    "genocide" regarding the actions of the Ottoman Empire against
    Armenians preferring to refer to them as "the terrible events of
    1915".

    It is ironic that President Obama chose Turkey to declare: "There's an
    old Turkish proverb: 'You cannot put out fire with flames.'" It is
    obviously a proverb that the Turkish government, not to mention the US
    government, needs to be reminded of.


    I am a Green Party member who lives in San Francisco. I have been
    active in water planning in the Middle Rio Grande region of New
    Mexico. I write political articles on the need for third parties, the
    contemporary failures of public education...

    http://www.opednews.com/articles/Pre sident-Obama-Misses-Fun-by-Matoska-090407-646.html

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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