Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Turkey: Ankara Wrestles With The Kurdish Issue

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Turkey: Ankara Wrestles With The Kurdish Issue

    TURKEY: ANKARA WRESTLES WITH THE KURDISH ISSUE
    Yigal Schleifer

    Eurasia Insight
    http://www.eurasianet.org/departments/insightb/ar ticles/eav080309.shtml
    8/03/09

    After decades of conflict and repressive policies, Turkish leaders
    appear to be taking concrete steps toward resolving the Kurdish
    issue. But analysts warn that domestic opposition and the lack of
    consultation with Kurds themselves could limit any plan's chances
    for success.

    In recent months, Turkish leaders have sent strong signals that an
    initiative to deal with the Kurdish issue is in the works. In May,
    President Abdullah Gul said that Turkey had an "historic opportunity"
    to address the issue, while Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, just
    before departing for a recent trip to Syria, told reporters: "Whether
    we call it the Kurdish, the southeast or eastern problem, whether we
    call it the Kurdish initiative, we have started work on this."

    In late July, meanwhile, Turkish Interior Minister Besir Atalay said
    during a nationally televised news conference that the government
    is actively working on a comprehensive plan -- one based on
    democratization and expanded rights. Although he didn't offer any
    specific details or a timeframe, Atalay told reporters, "We have the
    intention to take determined, patient and courageous steps."

    Writing in the English-language Hurriyet Daily News, political analyst
    Mehmet Ali Birand said the government's anticipated initiative does
    represent an important shift. "The Turkish Republic has now accepted
    the existence of a Kurdish issue and a [Kurdistan Workers' Party
    (PKK)] problem, and has started comprehensive efforts towards finding
    a solution. Until now, these issued were accepted, but ignored,"
    he wrote.

    "Now, for the first time, the Kurdish issue is being separated from
    the PKK issue, and again for the first time, a plan is being developed
    that will influence Turkey's future," Birand continued.

    According to reports in the Turkish press, the government's plan may
    include a series of moves on the cultural rights front, including the
    establishment of private Kurdish-language television stations and
    Kurdish language faculties in universities, as well allowing towns
    and villages to once again use their original Kurdish names. It is not
    clear if it would include a wide-ranging amnesty program for members
    of the outlawed PKK. The group continues to attack Turkish security
    forces, mostly from its hideouts in northern Iraq.

    Observers say a series of domestic and regional developments are
    forcing the political and military establishments in Ankara to
    confront the Kurdish issue in a new way. "The Turkish military is
    finally coming to grips with the fact that it cannot win this war,
    no matter what happens [to the PKK] in northern Iraq. It's finally
    dawning on them that some kind of political solution is necessary,"
    says Henri Barkey, a senior associate at the Carnegie Endowment for
    International Peace in Washington and an expert on Turkish politics.

    Barkey also says Turkey's ambitions to play a larger role on the
    world stage, particularly as a regional mediator, are also forcing
    Turkish leaders to take stock of the country's own problems. "Turkey
    is lecturing other countries, like Israel and [China], about
    human rights issues and here you have a country where the Kurdish
    language is illegal. That is absurd," Barkey said. "They have to do
    something. There is a discrepancy between domestic Turkey and the
    image it is trying to project abroad."

    Highlighting the paradox that Ankara is currently facing, the
    government of the liberal Islamic Justice and Development Party (AKP)
    has been a leading advocate for the acceptance of Hamas as a legitimate
    representative group of the Palestinians, but, at the same time,
    Erdogan has refused to meet with parliamentarians from the pro-Kurdish
    Democratic Society Party (DTP) until they publicly denounce the PKK.

    The Turkish government's initiative appears to be getting a push
    from a surprising source - jailed PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan, who is
    expected to issue his own "road map" for solving the Kurdish issue
    on August 15, the date when the PKK first took up arms in 1984.

    "The best thing for any government is to stay slightly ahead of
    the curve and have people react to you, rather than having jailed
    rebel leaders set the agenda," says Hugh Pope, Turkey analyst for
    the International Crisis Group, a policy and advocacy organization
    based in Brussels.

    Speaking recently to reporters in Ankara, Turkish Foreign Minister
    Ahmet Davutoglu said, "The Kurdish issue will be solved in Ankara,
    not in Imrali," referring to the prison where Ocalan is being held.

    But Barkey says the government will not be able to ignore the PKK
    leader. "Ocalan is definitely a challenge for the government. Here
    is a guy who is in prison and who is offering a way out. You can't
    spurn him anymore," he says.

    The big question now being asked is, once the government announces
    its plan, what are its chances for success? The ICG's Pope says an
    important element of the current debate, which may help any government
    initiative succeed, is that it is mostly domestically driven. "Ten
    years ago everyone in Europe would be lecturing Turkey about the
    Kurds. This current talk about a Kurdish opening is domestically
    driven, which makes it a lot more legitimate," he says. "Before,
    when Turkey was being lectured from the outside, it caused people to
    circle the wagons and stop listening."

    Dogu Ergil, a professor of political science at Ankara University,
    says the Kurdish initiative could be hurt by what he sees a lack
    of consultation between the government and other key players -
    particularly the Kurds themselves - about how to best approach the
    problem. "We lack a definition of what we are trying to solve and
    some people have gathered behind closed doors and decided they have
    the solution," he said.

    "For the Kurdish people in Turkey, it is still a state initiative,"
    Ergil continued. "The method has not been democratic enough so
    far. ... That's the problem. The whole thing is a mystery."

    Some analysts suggest that the AKP government may find itself in a
    bind on the issue. "They are going to have to sell this to a skeptical
    public and the opposition is going to raise hell," noted Barkey.

    Ultimately, the government's main challenge may be to come up with
    a plan that is politically viable, but which also meets rising
    expectations. "The problem with things like this is that when you
    raise expectations so high and then you don't do something, it's like
    setting a match to a tank of gasoline," says Barkey.
Working...
X