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ISTANBUL: The Rojava, the PYD, and the state's 'chronic Kurdish alle

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  • ISTANBUL: The Rojava, the PYD, and the state's 'chronic Kurdish alle

    Hurriyet, Turkey
    July 21 2013


    The Rojava, the PYD, and the state's 'chronic Kurdish allergy'

    by Cengiz Candar


    [Translated from Turkish]

    Who has contributed more to Kurdish music than [Armenian-origin
    folksinger] Aram Tigran[yan], I wonder? It is true that he was born in
    Al-Qamishli, the biggest Kurdish town in Syria, in 1934, but he was
    the child of a family from Diyarbakir that had fled the genocide in
    1915 and migrated to there. During his life, he put out 11 albums. He
    sang 230 songs in Kurmanji, 150 in Arabic, and 10 in Assyrian
    (Aramaic). He was a true child of Mesopotamia. His origins were as a
    Diyarbakir Armenian and a Syrian Kurd. He was an immortal figure in
    the Kurdish culture of Turkey.

    Why, when he died in 2009, the state did not permit him to be buried
    in Diyarbakir, is incomprehensible. But even if he has no grave in
    Diyarbakir, he today has a statue in Silvan.

    [Armenian-origin folksinger] Karapete Xaco[yan] was born in a village
    of Batman at the very beginning of the 1900s. In 1915, thanks to
    someone who spared his life, he found himself as a child in
    Al-Qamishli. He lived in Syria until 1946, and afterwards, until his
    death in 2005, in Yerevan. He worked on the Kurdish radio station. He
    was a great voice and collector of dengbej [traditional Kurdish bard]
    music. The overwhelming majority of Kurds consider him to be a Kurd.

    [Kurdish rock singer] Ciwan Haco is known directly as a Syrian Kurd.
    He was born in Al-Qamishli in 1957. He is an extraordinarily popular
    voice in Kurdish rock music. He has come to Turkey numerous times, and
    the earth virtually shook in the Kurdish regions. He is a Kurd, a
    citizen of Syria, born in Al-Qamishli, but his roots are in Mardin. He
    is the child of a Kurdish family that had fled following the Shaykh
    Said rebellion. After all, where is Al-Qamishli? It is just next door
    to the Nusaybin district of Mardin province. Between them is a
    railroad invented as the border line between Turkey and Syria by the
    French following the First World War.

    The same railroad separates Karkamis from Jarablus, the Mursitpinar
    border gate of Suruc from Kobani [Ayn al-Arab], Akcakale from Til
    Abyad, and Ceylanpinar from Serekaniye [Ra's al-Ayn]. Amudah is
    visible from Mardin. Whether Derbesiye [Al-Darbasiyah] is closer to
    Kiziltepe or to Senyurt is debatable. Just a short distance from Cizre
    is Derik [Al-Malikiyah].

    There is a border formed by a railroad, and there are two countries
    given two different names, but it is the same people living on both
    sides of the border. For this reason, the language of the Kurds living
    along the border in Turkey does not refer to Syria, nor does that of
    the Kurds in Syria refer to Turkey. They speak of the other side
    either as "bin xat" [Kurdish: "below the line"] or as "ser xat"
    ["above the line"]. "Below the line" or "above the line." The "line"
    is the railroad line. The situation that [poet] Ahmet Arif described
    in Hasretinden Prangalar Eskittim ["Fetters Worn Out by Longing"],
    saying "we never became reconciled to passports," was in terms of
    "below and above the line."

    So now, when a "Kurdish flag" has been seen on a macaroni processing
    plant in Serekaniye, just a stone's throw from Ceylanpinar, what is
    all this commotion?

    Why does the Prime Ministerial Adviser and Ankara Parliamentary Deputy
    [Yalcin Akdogan] (who has, in general, spent a major portion of his
    political career in making statements threatening the Kurds)
    immediately feel the need to leap to his pen and make a statement that
    "the PYD [Syrian Kurdish Democratic Union Party] is playing with
    fire"?

    According to Yalcin Akdogan, "the developments on the Syrian border
    have gradually begun to constitute a different national security
    problem for Turkey," and Turkey cannot simply ignore this situation.

    What would it supposedly do? That, he does not say. But the language
    is very openly the "language of threat." Directed against whom?
    Against the Syrian Kurds, naturally. Against the Syrian Kurds, who
    have their roots in Turkey. Let no one say "no, not against them, but
    against the PYD." In the environment of violence in Syria, is there
    any other "representative" authority other than the PYD (or the
    Kurdish High Council, which it dominates) that protects the Kurds and
    provides "self-administration" in the Kurdish towns?

    He also declares Turkey's "principle" with regard to Syria: "Turkey
    defends the rights of all the groups in Syria, including the Kurds.
    Movements that disregard the other groups and seek to establish
    domination over them destroy this basis of rights."

    Very nice. Well, then, when "Salafist-Islamist" forces like Al-Nusrah,
    which is a derivative of Al-Qa'idah, or the Liwa al-Faruq, or the
    Ahrar al-Sham, attacked Serekaniye on numerous occasions since last
    year, did Yalcin Akdogan make statements expressing such concerns even
    once?

    He did not. The issue, it is plainly clear, pertains to the Kurds'
    establishing administrations in the Kurdish regions.

    Also, why did Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, when the PYD
    administration was established in Kobani on 19 July last year, rush
    off to Arbil a week after the agreement signed among the Syrian Kurds
    in Arbil under the aegis of [Iraqi Kurdistan Regional President]
    Mas'ud Barzani, and even though he met with various Kurdish
    personalities in Arbil, why did he refuse to meet with PYD
    [Co-]Chairman Salih Muslim?

    Why does the same Ahmet Davutoglu, on the first anniversary of the
    "Rojava [Kurdish for "west", referring to West, i.e., Syrian,
    Kurdistan] Revolution," ring the alarm bells now that the Al-Nusrah
    forces have been expelled from Serekaniye (Ra's al-Ayn] and feel the
    need to speak as follows?:

    "Henceforth, the most efficacious methods will be taken against every
    sort of threat to our border security, no matter from what group or
    with what rationale it might come, and there will be immediate
    responsea¦ Indeed, there is an extremely fractious and high-tension
    state of war in Syria. The effort to create any new fait accompli or
    de facto situation would increase this fragility, and would cause even
    more negative consequences to come about."

    Sentences that, on paper, appear quite true. Well, then, why was the
    same sensitivity never evidenced or expressed when Islamist armed
    organizations of the Al-Qa'idah type, such as Al-Nusrah, seized some
    border points in "the north of Syria"?

    PYD Co-chairman Salih Muslim, in the interview published in
    yesterday's Taraf, after telling [journalist] Amberin Zaman that
    "there is no impression that Turkey is currently supporting
    Al-Nusrah," said the following:

    "But some border crossings are still under their control. Such as the
    Akcakale and Karkamis border gates. Turkey is happy with this."

    If this is the case, and if when the Syrian Kurds hoist a flag in a
    border town that belongs to them, even though we have not heard any
    "declaration of dissatisfaction" on this issue from any official
    spokesman, we try to get all of Turkey up in arms, and as if that were
    not enough the UN Security Council as well, then it means the Turkish
    state's "Kurdish allergy" continues.

    The following, from a statement to ANF [Firat News Agency] by KCK
    [Assembly of Communities of Kurdistan] Executive Council member Sahin
    Cilo on the occasion of the "19 July Revolution," drew my attention:

    "It is a question of an administration that has been forming for the
    past year in the Rojava, and this can be assessed as the most
    democratic administration in the Middle East. This system and
    administration have succeeded in protecting the Rojava as the safest
    area in the region. With destruction taking place in Syria, there is a
    secure environment here. This, in and of itself, constitutes a model
    for the peoples of Syria. But the regional and international forces
    are implementing their policies of slander against this, and at the
    same time are engaging in attacks against it."

    The same situation, and the exact same process, also obtained starting
    in the 1990s and during the first 9 years of the 2000s in "the north
    of Iraq," that is, South Kurdistan. Now, the behaviour shown during
    that period towards the Iraqi Kurds is being shown towards the
    "Rojava", that is, the "West."

    As a strange twist of fate, the Iraqi Kurds are these days Ankara's
    closest friends. And the Syrian Kurds as well - which in comparison to
    the Iraqi Kurds are more intimately connected to the Kurds of Turkey -
    will in the future be such close friends as well.

    Let us not forget that the PYD and the Kurdish political movement in
    Turkey (the PKK [Kurdistan People's Congress, KGK] and the BDP [Peace
    and Democracy Party]) are like two sides of the same coin. When BDP
    mayors are seen as normal in various sections of Turkey, there should
    be nothing in Syrian Kurdish towns' coming under the administration of
    the PYD that would upset Turkey.

    Moreover, for Ankara to have positive and confident relations with the
    PYD would be one of the greatest guarantees of Turkey's "Peace and
    Solution Process" reaching its goal.

    [Translated from Turkish]

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