Tag: BDP

  • Pro-Kurdish Legislators End Boycott of Turkish Parliament

    Pro-Kurdish Legislators End Boycott of Turkish Parliament

    Associated Press

    ANKARA, Turkey—A pro-Kurdish party on Saturday ended its four-month-old boycott of the parliament as its lawmakers joined the legislative body to take their oath to assume office.

    The lawmakers of the Peace and Democracy Party have been refusing to take an oath of office following their election in June as they pressed for the release of five pro-Kurdish legislators held on charges of rebel ties. They also wanted another Kurdish politician, Hatip Dicle, whose election was canceled due to a conviction for rebel links, to be allowed to take office.

    “We are joining the parliament to work for peace and equal rights for all citizens,” Selahattin Demirtas, the chairman of the party, told reporters on Saturday.

    Thirty party lawmakers will take their oath in the 550-seat parliament which convened following summer recess. Mr. Demirtas first announced the party’s decision to end the boycott on Wednesday.

    The rebels have killed dozens of members of the security force and at least 14 civilians since July and kidnapped several state employees, including a dozen teachers, in apparent response to the government’s refusal to allow education in Kurdish language.

    Turkey’s military has responded by staging airstrikes against Kurdish rebel bases in northern Iraq and launching anti-rebel operations against rebel bands on remote mountains along the Iraqi border.

    Turkey last staged an incursion into Iraq early 2008 and it has not ruled out a new cross-border raid if needed. Lawmakers are to vote to extend a mandate authorizing the military to launch cross-border operations against Kurdish rebel bases in Iraq. The current mandate expires on Oct. 17. The measure is expected to be swiftly approved despite strong opposition of the pro-Kurdish party.

    via Pro-Kurdish Legislators End Boycott of Turkish Parliament – WSJ.com.

  • A Fired News Anchor Strikes Back

    A Fired News Anchor Strikes Back

    banuguven iccFor the last few years, dark-haired news anchor Banu Guven was one of the main and most popular faces of Turkish news network NTV. This summer, soon after Turkey’s June 12 parliamentary election, Guven was unexpectedly fired. The network has said little about why she was let go, but Guven claims it was because her bosses were worried that the airtime she wanted to give Kurdish activists and politicians in the run-up to the election might anger the government of the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP). According to Guven, her request to interview Leyla Zana, a popular candidate (and now MP) with the pro-Kurdish Peace and Democracy Party (BDP), was shot down. Meanwhile, another pre-election show she did with well-known Kurdish novelist and activist Vedat Turkeli, in which her guest praised the jailed leader of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) and threw his support behind the BDP, has since been removed from NTV’s online archives and appears to have further angered her bosses.

    Guven has now issued an open letter to Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, accusing his government of fostering an environment that has forced media outlets to practice self-censorship if they want to stay alive. This accusation has been put forth before, mostly by members of Turkey’s more secularist news organizations, but Guven is probably the most high-profile media figure to make the claim.

    The government might not be the only one to blame in this. Turkey’s media landscape is increasingly becoming dominated by large conglomerates that also have various other business interests, from roadbuilding to textiles, which they do not want to jeopardize by crossing Ankara. The Council of Europe’s Commissioner of Human Rights, who recently visited Turkey and issued a report about press freedom, raises this as one of the “worrying” trends he saw in the country. Today’s Zaman columnist Yavuz Baydar also tackles the question of how the interaction between business and politics is shaping news coverage in Turkey.

    via Turkey: A Fired News Anchor Strikes Back | EurasiaNet.org.

  • Turkey’s “First Christian”

    Turkey’s “First Christian”

    Editor’s Note: Soner Cagaptay is Director of the Turkish Research Program at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy and a Visiting Professor at Georgetown University. He is the co-author, with Scott Carpenter, of Regenerating the U.S.-Turkey Partnership.

    By Soner Cagaptay – Special to CNN

    cross

    Amidst news of Turkey’s political turmoil – a parliamentary boycott led by the main opposition party has overshadowed the June 12th election victory of the ruling Justice and Development Party’s (AKP), and the Turkish political system faces a stalemate – a key development has almost gone unnoticed. On June 12th, the Turks elected the country’s first Christian deputy, Mr. Erol Dora, to the Ankara parliament (Meclis), literally making him Turkey’s “First Christian.”

    Mr. Dora’s election to the Turkish Meclis is a true breath of fresh air. Not counting a handful of Christians who were allocated legislative seats in the twentieth century due to legal quotas, Mr. Dora is the first Christian deputy elected to sit in the Ankara legislature.

    This is big news. Christians represent just 1/1000 of the country’s population. In a symbolic move, Muslim Turks have chosen to elect a Christian Turk to represent them.

    This development presents an opportunity for Turkey to come to terms with its rich Christian heritage. Moreover, it signals that the country’s opposed camps, clustered around the conservative AKP and its liberal-secular opponents in an almost homogenously Muslim Turkey, can learn to live together under a liberal roof.

    The first element of symbolism in Mr. Dora’s election is that he has de facto become the “First Christian” in Turkey, which was, as many say, “the first country in history to have a Christian majority.”

    Since Jesus, Turkish Christians have dwindled in numbers and the country’s Christian heritage has weathered a tumultuous and debilitating period in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Now, with Mr. Dora in the Meclis, Christian heritage in Turkey has found voice, as well as a reminder of the country’s thriving, and once dominant, Christian past.

    However, the symbolism of Mr. Dora’s election does not stop there.

    Today, Turkey is about to draft its first civilian constitution. As the military drafted the country’s previous charters, all Turks agree that they need a new constitution. But the question remains: will this charter assure the opposing factions of the society, including those clustered around the AKP and its opponents, that they can live together?

    Since the AKP came to power in 2002, the struggle between pro- and anti-AKP groups has nearly torn Turkey in two. There have been coup allegations against the AKP followed by the Ergenekon case.

    The opposition says the government has used the case not only to prosecute coup allegations, but also to crack down on its secular and liberal opponents. In addition, the AKP has levied massive tax fines against independent media. Furthermore, the judiciary is split along ideological lines. Conservative and secular powers steadfastly attempt to destroy each other.

    This, then, is the recipe for the new Turkey: pro-AKP and anti-AKP Turks try to undermine each other out of mutual fear. Hence, the country’s new constitution must provide room for everyone. If the Turks, who are over 99 percent Muslim nominally, can elect a Christian to represent themselves, surely they can write such a constitution.

    To that end, the AKP must realize that secular, liberal Turkey, which comprises at least half of the country’s population, is too big to ignore. And the secular liberals must realize that, unlike a decade ago, Turkey has a large, established conservative-Islamist elite and political party with widespread support.

    Both halves of the country must work together toward a new constitution, lest Turkey suffer a split down the middle. That would be bad for the country – the only experiment in the world that unites Islam and democracy – and for those watching it.

    Mr. Dora faces a tall order, whether or nor he is aware of it. First, he is elected to the Turkish parliament representing a Kurdish nationalist party. Second, he is a Christian voted in by Muslim constituents. Third, he sits in a conservative-Islamist dominated legislature as the deputy of a secular party. Then there is the issue of politics versus violence. Mr. Dora’s party, the BDP, does not hide its sympathies for the Kurdistan Worker Party (PKK), which employs violence and terror attacks.

    The list is not done yet: in fact, Mr. Dora is neither Turkish, nor Kurdish, but rather an ethnic Syriac. He embodies every dichotomy facing Turkey: Kurdish and Turkish, Christian and Muslim, secular and conservative, Islamist and liberal, and last but not least, political activism versus violence.

    Yet he also represents hope for Turkey’s future. Mr. Dora’s very election stands as a sign that Turks can live together if they take a hint from his election: drafting a liberal charter that accommodates the country’s many identities and political aspirations.

    The views expressed in this article are solely those of Soner Cagaptay.

    via Turkey’s “First Christian” – Global Public Square – CNN.com Blogs.

  • Poll Shows BDP’s Seats Will Increase in Turkey’s June Elections

    Poll Shows BDP’s Seats Will Increase in Turkey’s June Elections

    According to the results of a poll ran by Metropol company that is based in Ankara the Development and Justice Party (AKP) of PM Erdogan will lose a considerable number of votes in the June 12 elections.

    bdp elections

    The AKP’s seats in parliament are expected to lower to 300 to 310 seats. The Kurdish Peace and Democracy Party (BDP) that runs in the elections independently is expected to win over 30 seats.

    Ozer Sinjar, head of Metropol Company shared the final results of their poll with Rudaw. He said that their results show that the AKP may win only around 42 percent of the votes.

    Regarding BDP, Sinjar said, “in Southeastern Turkey BDP’s votes are going up everyday and in that area alone the candidates are expected to win %25 of the votes.”

    The poll indicates that BDP may win 3 seats in Istanbul and in each one of the cities of Mersin, Adana and Gaziantep.

    The Republican People’s Party (CHP) recently expressed great willingness to work towards addressing the Kurdish issue in the next Grand National Assembly and that changed the view of many in the Kurdish regions of Turkey.

    The head of Metropol said, “since Kemal Kilicdaroglu started heading it, the party [CHP]’s support in southeastern Turkey has increased by %1. If Kilicdaroglu had started the democratization of his party earlier he would have had a bigger chance in Southeastern Turkey.”

    via Rudaw in English….The Happening: Latest News and Multimedia about Kurdistan, Iraq and the World – Poll Shows BDP’s Seats Will Increase in Turkey’s June Elections.

  • Civil disobedience act in Istanbul – Taksim Square

    Civil disobedience act in Istanbul – Taksim Square

    Thousands flooded to Taksim Gezi Park in Istanbul to pitch a Democratic Solution Tent. Istanbul Democratic City Councils started a sit-in act as police did not allow for the solution tent. Istanbul, Turkey. 27/03/2011

    democratic solution

    in Politics, on the 27th of March 2011

    Thousands flooded to Taksim Gezi Park in Istanbul to pitch a Democratic Solution Tent. Leading the action as a part of civil disobedience actions, Istanbul Democratic City Councils started a sit-in act as police did not allow for the solution tent.

    Many intellectuals, political parties, NGOs, particularly human rights and women rights organizations, Peace and Democracy Party (BDP) deputies, members and executives, journalists and mostly Kurdish residents of Istanbul are sitting in the park while the council is negotiating with police authority to erect the tent.

    Thousands of activists are currently waving banners, chanting slogans, singing songs and dancing in the Park.

    The demands of Kurds and messages from imprisoned BDP candidates for nomination were read from the stand for the action. BDP deputies, Sırrı Sakık and Ufuk Uras, addressed the participants as well.

    via Civil disobedience act in Istanbul – Taksim Square | Demotix.com.