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From Susurluk To Paris

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  • From Susurluk To Paris

    FROM SUSURLUK TO PARIS
    BY HRAYR S. KARAGUEUZIAN

    http://asbarez.com/107603/from-susurluk-to-paris/

    Funeral of slain Kurdish activist in Paris Sakine Cansiz

    The Susurluk scandal refers to the events surrounding the peak of the
    Turkey-Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) conflict, in the mid-1990s. It
    is considered a scandal because it indicated a close relationship
    between the government, the armed forces, and organized crime. The
    relationship came into existence after the National Security Council
    (MGK), Turkey's highest body of authority conceived the need for
    the marshaling of the nation's various "resources" to combat the
    separatist, Kurdistan Workers' Party.

    The scandal surfaced with a car crash on November 3 1996, near
    Susurluk, in the south-eastern province of Balıkesir, Turkey. The
    scandal revealed relations between criminal networks, the police, and
    the government in Turkey. When a government car crashed, found at the
    scene were: Abdullah Catli, internationally wanted alleged murderer;
    chief police officer Huseyin Kocadag; and Sedat Bucak, a deputy for
    the True Path party (DYP) the political party of then Prime Minster
    Tansu Ciller. A sinister alliance of political representatives with
    gangsters in combating the Kurds was hence exposed.

    Fast forward to 2013; three Kurdish women were murdered execution
    style in the Kurdish Information Center in Paris on January 11. One
    of the three murdered women, Sakine Cansiz, was a close companion of
    Andullah Ocalan, the imprisoned leader of PKK. She was present when the
    PKK was founded in the late 1970s and spent years in the Diyarbakir
    Prison, notorious for the systematic torture that took place there,
    and later went on to become an important PKK representative in Europe.

    Who Is Responsible? The question of who was behind the killings of
    the three Kurdish women remains unanswered at the present. However,
    the lessons of the past indicate a clear role for the Turkish "deep
    state" in assassination plots. The examples Hrant Dink who was trying
    to assemble and catalog the identity of Turkish citizens of Armenian
    descent thus bringing forward the memory of the Gencoide, the recent
    assassination of a teacher in an Armenian School in Turkey all point
    to an organized assassination rather than an ordinary killing.

    Surprisingly, Dink's case was initially dismissed as an organized
    murder. However, most recently the prosecutor's office of Turkey's
    Supreme Court of Appeals has asked the top court to overturn the
    rulings as an "ordinary killing," arguing that the assassination was
    "organized."

    "Anything is possible," says the Turkish journalist Saruhan Oluc .

    "Both opponents of the peace process within the PKK, or Turkish
    right-wing extremists linked to the security apparatus who oppose an
    agreement with the Kurds, are potential perpetrators." A politically
    correct discourse would be to suggest an "internal Kurdish struggle"
    as PM Erdogan did without wasting time. However he did not dismiss
    a more sinister possibility. Erdogan, with his Islamist agenda is
    a different breed of politician compared to his late mentor Prime
    Minister Necmettin Erbakan. Erdogan is credited in dismantling of a
    military plot Balioz (Sludge hammer) designed to topple his government,
    However, Erdogan's selective pursuit of justice is devoid of a high
    moral compass. He is after the truth that brings him more power and
    against issues that bring forward the memory of the Genocide. "That's
    how it is here," says the journalist Saruhan Oluc.

    "A positive step [i.e., talks with Ocalan] has barely been made
    before another setback takes place." The journalist was referring
    to the recent "opening" by the Turkish PM Erdogan, who had sent a
    representative to ostensibly discuss possible ways of ending the
    lethal violence with the PKK leader Ocalan.

    The question was and remains: Which Turkish government can be trusted,
    the "deep" or the "not so deep"?

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