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by Aaron Glantz, April 27, 2006
Life for Kurds in northern Iraq is about to get a lot more
complicated.
The Turkish army has begun massing troops on Iraq's northern
border in an effort to combat the Kurdish armed group the
PKK.
In the last week, the Turkish government has sent about 40,000
troops to southeastern Anatolia, bringing the total troops
stationed near the Iraqi border to an estimated 250,000 (close
to double the number of U.S. forces in Iraq).
The buildup represents the largest number of Turkish soldiers
deployed to the region since Turkey captured guerilla leader
Abdullah Ocalan in 1999. After that, Kurdish fighters declared
a unilateral cease-fire, and approximately 5,000 cadres withdrew
into a base in the mountains of northern Iraq.
Since then, they had given up on an independent Kurdistan
and instead hoped political dialogue could bring additional
civil and cultural rights for Kurds in Turkey. But the Turkish
government stubbornly refused to give Kurds any kind of minority
rights. Preachers remain barred by law from giving their sermons
in Kurdish, and public schools are forbidden to teach Kurdish
children in the language of their ancestors. According to
Human Rights Watch's annual report for 2006:
"Turkey's courts and state officials repeatedly obstruct
language freedoms. As of November 2005 not a single private
broadcaster had been given permission to broadcast in Kurdish.
In June the Ankara governor refused to authorize the
Kurdish Democracy Culture and Solidarity Association (Ku"rt-Der),
claiming that the organization's program 'to secure the social
and individual rights of Kurds' was unconstitutional. In July
the Bingo"l governor imposed a U.S.$800 'administrative
fine' on local Human Rights Association (HRA) President Ridvan
Kizgin for printing the association's letterhead in Kurdish
as well as Turkish, supposedly a breach of the Associations
Law requirement that correspondence be exclusively in Turkish."
In reaction to this inaction, PKK guerillas called off their
cease-fire last year, launching bombings in major Turkish
cities and attacks on Turkish army units stationed in the
Kurdish-populated southeast. That's brought more state repression
from the Turkish government, whose units killed at least 13
Kurds earlier this month at funerals for PKK rebels.
It was in this atmosphere that U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice arrived in Ankara Tuesday. Rice made no mention of Turkey's
human rights record and instead tried to placate the Turkish
army.
"We obviously also are sharing information. The U.S.
was active in helping in the past with the PKK, and we will
be active in the future," she said.
Rice's statements are understandable given the number of
ways Turkey could hobble Iraq if its leaders aren't satisfied.
If Turkey closed its border with Iraq, the Iraqi economy would
be paralyzed. More than half of all goods and services come
into the country through Turkey. When Turkish truckers went
on strike last year, Kurdish officials inside Iraq were forced
to enact severe rationing programs.
Beyond that, even an invasion is possible. Before Rice's
visit, the commander of Turkey's armed forces, Gen. Hilmi
O"zko"k, was asked if his military would ask for
permission from Washington before crossing the border into
Iraq. "We cannot make a decision of that kind based on
the USA," he said. "Every country is sovereign.
Every country makes its own decisions. If the conditions change,
you act by the changing conditions."
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