Berliner Boersenzeitung - PKK militants want to enter Turkish politics: top commander

EUR -
AED 4.262031
AFN 77.159165
ALL 96.2514
AMD 444.126969
ANG 2.077509
AOA 1064.048412
ARS 1659.015129
AUD 1.763958
AWG 2.090095
AZN 1.968919
BAM 1.951282
BBD 2.337787
BDT 141.352705
BGN 1.955787
BHD 0.437422
BIF 3423.056828
BMD 1.160358
BND 1.503718
BOB 8.020395
BRL 6.213676
BSD 1.160712
BTN 102.941644
BWP 15.453219
BYN 3.945365
BYR 22743.021637
BZD 2.334395
CAD 1.62008
CDF 2796.463117
CHF 0.931533
CLF 0.028124
CLP 1103.442725
CNY 8.261174
CNH 8.298876
COP 4517.854834
CRC 584.147435
CUC 1.160358
CUP 30.749494
CVE 109.944269
CZK 24.378891
DJF 206.219091
DKK 7.467288
DOP 72.749252
DZD 151.231838
EGP 55.179325
ERN 17.405374
ETB 168.130545
FJD 2.625852
FKP 0.863274
GBP 0.867611
GEL 3.150431
GGP 0.863274
GHS 14.458582
GIP 0.863274
GMD 84.125156
GNF 10066.107831
GTQ 8.893408
GYD 242.836677
HKD 9.029438
HNL 30.447974
HRK 7.532927
HTG 151.878333
HUF 391.510716
IDR 19264.963828
ILS 3.794882
IMP 0.863274
INR 103.036443
IQD 1520.069303
IRR 48804.668302
ISK 141.449847
JEP 0.863274
JMD 185.779836
JOD 0.822732
JPY 177.415871
KES 150.270711
KGS 101.473743
KHR 4665.800772
KMF 490.831248
KPW 1044.322759
KRW 1653.174165
KWD 0.355697
KYD 0.96726
KZT 627.088008
LAK 25150.764915
LBP 103910.080626
LKR 351.226752
LRD 211.939708
LSL 20.00478
LTL 3.426236
LVL 0.701889
LYD 6.283332
MAD 10.576664
MDL 19.70238
MGA 5193.763774
MKD 61.612783
MMK 2435.872496
MNT 4174.181431
MOP 9.304815
MRU 46.269327
MUR 52.908803
MVR 17.756916
MWK 2014.96541
MXN 21.302814
MYR 4.892047
MZN 74.144449
NAD 20.00419
NGN 1705.784207
NIO 42.53896
NOK 11.596039
NPR 164.70663
NZD 2.008704
OMR 0.446154
PAB 1.160707
PEN 3.994529
PGK 4.854943
PHP 67.38223
PKR 326.275467
PLN 4.253885
PYG 8105.232727
QAR 4.224851
RON 5.094787
RSD 117.193879
RUB 94.521415
RWF 1680.198741
SAR 4.352325
SBD 9.550377
SCR 16.749976
SDG 697.893464
SEK 10.969145
SGD 1.504584
SHP 0.911859
SLE 27.059833
SLL 24332.136508
SOS 663.147181
SRD 44.270565
STD 24017.072955
STN 24.866477
SVC 10.156483
SYP 15086.760527
SZL 20.004542
THB 37.74936
TJS 10.794459
TMT 4.061254
TND 3.388823
TOP 2.717672
TRY 48.388227
TTD 7.88175
TWD 35.48255
TZS 2847.609647
UAH 48.131354
UGX 3986.76883
USD 1.160358
UYU 46.332719
UZS 13982.316852
VES 219.32259
VND 30587.043386
VUV 140.657895
WST 3.215194
XAF 654.441672
XAG 0.023517
XAU 0.000287
XCD 3.135927
XCG 2.091856
XDR 0.811915
XOF 653.28213
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.371984
ZAR 19.918211
ZMK 10444.619301
ZMW 27.532132
ZWL 373.634882
  • CMSC

    -0.0300

    23.71

    -0.13%

  • BCC

    1.9000

    76.42

    +2.49%

  • RBGPF

    -1.0800

    77.14

    -1.4%

  • CMSD

    -0.0700

    24.33

    -0.29%

  • RIO

    1.4500

    67.7

    +2.14%

  • SCS

    -0.0700

    16.79

    -0.42%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    23.23

    -0.26%

  • GSK

    -0.1500

    43.35

    -0.35%

  • NGG

    -0.2700

    73.61

    -0.37%

  • JRI

    0.0500

    14.12

    +0.35%

  • BTI

    -0.3800

    51.6

    -0.74%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1400

    15.4

    -0.91%

  • VOD

    0.0000

    11.27

    0%

  • RELX

    0.4000

    45.84

    +0.87%

  • BP

    -0.4500

    34.52

    -1.3%

  • AZN

    -0.4900

    85.38

    -0.57%

PKK militants want to enter Turkish politics: top commander
PKK militants want to enter Turkish politics: top commander / Photo: Shwan MOHAMMED - AFP

PKK militants want to enter Turkish politics: top commander

Kurdish militants want to return to Turkey and enter mainstream politics, one of the PKK's joint leaders told AFP on Friday after the group's fighters began destroying their arms at a ceremony in Iraq.

Text size:

Speaking to AFP after handing in her own weapon alongside 29 of her comrades, the Kurdistan Workers' Party's top female commander Bese Hozat said if Turkey were willing, the disarmament process could be completed very quickly.

But the 47-year-old militant also warned the fragile peace process risked being derailed if Ankara fails to free the PKK's jailed founder Abdullah Ocalan, also known as 'Apo' -- Kurdish for 'uncle'.

"If Apo were freed tomorrow and... Turkey made legal and constitutional arrangements the next day, within a week we could return to engage in democratic politics," she said of a process which Ankara expects to last for months.

Ocalan has been serving a life sentence in solitary confinement on the prison island of Imrali near Istanbul since 1999 and his release has been a constant demand of the PKK.

- 'We miss him very much' -

"Ensuring leader Apo's physical freedom legally, via legal guarantees, is essential... he should be able to freely lead and manage this process. This is our primary condition and demand," she said.

"We want to see him, we miss him very much and there are many things we want to discuss with him," said Hozat, who joined the PKK when she was 16 and has spent more than three decades of her life as a fighter.

"Without this development, it is highly unlikely that the process will continue successfully."

Earlier this week, the 76-year-old dismissed talk of his own release as unimportant, positioning himself more as a guide than as a leader of the ongoing process.

Hozat said it was essential Turkey put in place mechanisms to allow them to return without fear of prosecution or reprisal.

"We do not want to wage armed struggle against Turkey, we want to come to Turkey and do democratic politics. In order for us... to achieve democratic integration with Turkey, it is imperative we can freely travel to Turkey," she said.

"If Turkey takes concrete steps, enacts laws and implements radical legal reforms... we will go to Turkey and engage in politics. If (not)... we will end up either in prison or being killed."

- 'The PKK no longer exists' -

Asked whether she now expected Turkey and its Western allies to remove the PKK from their blacklists of terrorist organisations, Hozat said the issue was irrelevant.

"Right now, the PKK no longer exists, we've dissolved it. We are a freedom movement.. advocating for peace and a democratic society.

"The PKK has achieved its main goal: the existence of the Kurds has been recognised."

Seen as the world's largest stateless people, the Kurds were left without a country when the Ottoman Empire collapsed after World War I.

Although most live in Turkey, where they make up around a fifth of the population, the Kurds are also spread across Iraq, Iran and Syria, where Ankara has for years been striking Kurdish fighters.

Hozat hailed positive changes in Syria since the PKK announced the end of its armed struggle against Turkey.

"Turkish attacks on (Kurdish-majority) northeastern Syria have ceased and its autonomous administration is currently negotiating" with the Damascus government.

Hozat said the Kurdish question was the key to freedom for all peoples of the Middle East.

"If the Kurdish question is resolved, the Middle East can truly become a democracy," she said.

"That's why we want this solution everywhere, including Iran, which must also become democratic. The Kurdish question must also be resolved there on the basis of autonomy."

(G.Gruner--BBZ)