Turkish top court bans pro-Kurdish party

DTP
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Turkey’s Constitutional Court has voted to ban the country’s largest pro-Kurdish party on charges of connections to a terrorist organization PKK[1].

DTP

Turkey’s chief prosecutor Abdurrahman Yalcinkaya argued that the Democratic Society Party (DTP) took orders from the [2] (PKK).

The DTP is the latest in a series of pro-Kurdish parties to have been closed down in Turkey.

The case has been criticised by the EU, which Turkey hopes to join.

The 11 judges in the Constitutional Court ruled that the DTP had become a “focal point of activities against the indivisible unity of the state, the country and the nation”, court president Hasim Kilic told reporters.

He said DTP leaders Ahmet Turk and Aysel Tugluk had been stripped of parliamentary immunity and banned from politics for five years along with 35 other party members.

All party assets would be seized by the treasury, Mr Kilic added.

The DTP holds 21 seats in Turkey’s 550-member parliament.

Some 40,000 people have died since the PKK launched an armed campaign in 1984. However, the government has recently sought to improve ties with the Kurdish minority.

Analysts say the court’s ruling could derail the government’s initiative.

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*edited

BBC


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One response to “Turkish top court bans pro-Kurdish party”

  1. Ataturk Society of UK Avatar
    Ataturk Society of UK

    This ban should have happened long ago and it is right and just. DTP had been increasingly vocalizing the PKK’s (a terrorist organization which has been responsible for 35 000 deaths by now) aims and objectives and acting as a mouth piece of the PKK and their criminal leader Ocalan who is serving life imprinsonment.
    DTP may have had honorouble political aims to enhance the Kurdish cause in a legitimate and democratic way but this has long been abondened and instead it has been openly challenging the democratic principles of both the Parliament and the Country and acting as an open agent for a terrorist organisation.
    It is such a shame that it is always the way in Turkey that the Parliamentary democracy and the wishes of the law abiding people have to suffer and Turkey gets a bad name (EU is always ready to criticise any legitimate action taken by the Turkish Courts anyway) in the process.
    We applaud the decision of the Constitutional Court and say ‘it is about time’.

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