2 April 2002

1. "Kurds to chase goal peacefully", the Kurdish rebel group the PKK is to abandon its violent struggle against Turkey and pursue a more legitimate political route, its leader has said. Osman Ocalan said the PKK was aiming to transform itself into a new organisation that would peacefully call for greater Kurdish rights in Turkey as well as in Iran, Iraq and Syria.

2. "Turkey: PKK Considers New Phase In Struggle For Kurdish Rights", the Kurdistan Workers Party, Turkey's most notorious neo-Marxist guerrilla group, says it will abandon its name as part of a campaign to achieve its objectives through legitimate and peaceful means. The party, which Ankara has banned on charges of separatist activities, appears resolved to break free from its violent reputation in a bid to regain influence over Turkey's 12-million-strong Kurdish minority.

3. "Noam Chomsky's Diyarbakir speech”, (..) if I can open with just a personal remark of my own, it is a very moving experience for me to be here. I have followed as best I can the noble and tragic history of the Kurds in Turkey in past years from everything I can find, particularly in last ten years. But it is quite different to see the actual faces of the people who are resisting and who continue to struggle for freedom and justice. (..)

4. "Death toll in Turkish prison hunger strike rises to 50", the death toll in a long-standing hunger strike by prisoners protesting controversial jail reforms in Turkey reached 50 when a woman detainee died in hospital here on Monday, a human rights activist said.

5. "Turkey hopes to be ready for EU accession talks by year-end", Foreign Minister Ismail Cem expressed hope Sunday that Turkey would become ready by the end of 2002 to open accession talks with the European Union, reports said Sunday.

6. "Turkey considers Kurdish broadcasts", Kurds say the language is an essential part of their identity.

7. "17,000 signatures to stop death fasts", the Human Rights Association on Monday presented 17,000 signatures, collected in the "Three Doors, Three Locks" campaign to put an end to death fasts, to Parliamentary Human Rights Committee Chairman Huseyin Akgul.

8. "Eris: 'EU does not want to divide Turkey'", IKV Chairman Meral Gezgin Eris, stating that the lack of consensus between the government partners, and the separation of some circles over full EU membership were not helpful, said 'It is not logical to say that the EU wants to divide Turkey'.


1. - CNN - "Kurds to chase goal peacefully":

ANKARA / April 1

The Kurdish rebel group the PKK is to abandon its violent struggle against Turkey and pursue a more legitimate political route, its leader has said.

Osman Ocalan said the PKK was aiming to transform itself into a new organisation that would peacefully call for greater Kurdish rights in Turkey as well as in Iran, Iraq and Syria.

"The new organisation will be different from the PKK, it will support and contribute to a solution of the Kurdish problem in all of the four countries," he said.

The new group has yet to choose a name, he added, despite newspaper reporters saying it will be called the "People's Freedom Party."

The PKK has carried out a violent campaign against Turkish troops during the past 15 years in which 37,000 people have died, mainly Kurds.

Ocalan has led the Kurdistan Workers' Party, or PKK, since his brother Abdullah's capture in Kenya and trial in 1999.

Osman Ocalan warned that the new group would abandon its new policy if the imprisoned Abdullah had the death penalty carried out against him. He said the execution would be a "cause for war."

He told The Associated Press by satellite telephone from a base in northern Iraq that the new group would not seek to break away from Turkey but would peacefully struggle for greater cultural and democratic rights for Kurds.

A new name for the political organisation will be decided at a party congress to be held in the coming months.

In Iraq, the group would seek to establish a Kurdish federation, he said. It would also lead a campaign for more democracy in Iran and Syria.

Turkey does not consider its estimated 12 million Kurds an official minority and outlaws the use of the Kurdish language in schools, official events and broadcasts other than music.

The government fears that giving in to Kurdish demands could break up the country along ethnic lines.

Abdullah Ocalan called a unilateral cease-fire soon after his sentencing, and violence diminished when most of his rebels withdrew to Iran and Iraq.

But Osman warned that if his brother is executed: "The fighting would be worse than before. I don't even want to think about it. The death toll would mount to hundreds of thousands."

Several politicians have said Abdullah Ocalan should be hanged before the country abolishes the death penalty to comply with the standards of the European Union, which Turkey is hoping to join.

Turkey, which has refused to negotiate with the rebels, has dismissed the group's attempts to change its image as a tactic to gain favour with the countries of the European Union.

The United States said a name change by the PKK would not enable it to escape penalties called for as an officially designated foreign terrorist organisation.

Under U.S. law, Americans cannot provide financial help to groups on the foreign terrorist organisation list. Members of such groups also are barred from entering the U.S.


2. - Radio Free Europe - "Turkey: PKK Considers New Phase In Struggle For Kurdish Rights":

The Kurdistan Workers Party, Turkey's most notorious neo-Marxist guerrilla group, says it will abandon its name as part of a campaign to achieve its objectives through legitimate and peaceful means. The party, which Ankara has banned on charges of separatist activities, appears resolved to break free from its violent reputation in a bid to regain influence over Turkey's 12-million-strong Kurdish minority.

PRAGUE / 28 March 2002 / By Jean-Christophe PeuchJean-Christophe Peuch

The outlawed Turkish-based Kurdistan Workers Party, better known by its Kurdish acronym of PKK (Partiya Karkeri Kurdistan), has announced plans to restructure and engage in a peaceful struggle for Kurdish rights.

A PKK statement published on 6 February in German-based Kurdish media said the party's leadership "deems it necessary to stop political, organizational, and practical activities under the PKK banner, especially in Turkey and European Union countries." The communique said that, after the 11 September terrorist attacks, the PKK and the Kurdish people do not wish "to be associated with oppression, division, and terror, but with democracy, peace, and freedom."

The party said a final decision regarding its new name, statutes, and objectives will be made at a forthcoming congress.

On 25 March, Turkish media quoted intelligence sources as saying the congress took place recently at an unspecified location in northern Iraq. The reports said the PKK decided to change its name to the People's Freedom Party, or PAG (Partyia Azadiya Gelan).

Contacted by RFE/RL, a leader of the Kurdish National Congress, who identified himself only as Adam, would neither confirm nor deny that a PKK congress took place but said no decision has been reached regarding the party's name.

Adam said the decision to change the party's focus was prompted by a reassessment of the situation both inside and around Turkey: "The first reason is that the PKK wants to give a new impulse toward the solving of the Kurdish issue and wants to widen its platform. Secondly, a lot of things have changed in the world over the past decade. The world has changed, and the old order is no longer here. A lot of things have changed in Turkey itself, even among Kurds. The PKK wants to renew itself because it has been set up under specific circumstances that no longer exist."

Officials in Ankara dismiss the PKK's decision to change its focus as a ploy. Justice Minister Sami Hikmet Turk said he doubts the PKK transformation is genuine: "It is very unlikely that by changing its name, [the PKK] will change and change its objectives. I see it as a new attempt on the road toward its politicization."

Speaking to reporters on the sidelines of a NATO summit in Bucharest on 26 March, Turkish Prime Minister Bulent Ecevit described the initiative as an attempt to mislead European countries: "The PKK wishes to enter a reorganization process aimed at concealing its true personality as part of a camouflage effort. On this issue, it has found some support in Europe. But, all in all, the EU is well aware of [the situation]."

The PKK was founded in 1978 by a 30-year-old Ankara university student known as Abdullah Ocalan with the aim of establishing an independent Kurdistan in Turkey's southeast. To counter the dramatic increase in anti-Kurdish moves that followed the 1980 military coup in Ankara, the PKK intensified its activities and, starting in 1984, launched a 15-year guerrilla war in Turkey's predominantly Kurdish provinces.

Fighting between Turkish troops and armed separatists left an estimated 35,000 dead -- mostly Kurdish fighters and civilians -- until Ocalan was arrested in Kenya in early 1999 and handed over to Turkish authorities. In June 1999, Ocalan was sentenced to death on charges of high treason and locked in a high security jail on an island in the Sea of Marmara, where he is awaiting execution.

During his trial, Ocalan urged his followers to lay down their weapons. Most Kurdish fighters went into hiding in Iraq and Iran. Turkey, which did not recognize the cease-fire, continued to carry out security crackdowns in its Kurdish provinces as well as incursions into Iraqi Kurdistan in pursuit of PKK fugitives.

David McDowell is a U.K.-based historian specializing in Kurdish affairs. In an interview with RFE/RL, he said the 5,000 armed PKK activists who Turkey says have sought refuge in Iraq, Iran, and Syria no longer represent a threat to Ankara.

"I don't think [the PKK] represents a threat at all to Turkey. If I was the Turks, I would be much more worried about the idea of Kurdish identity as a real 'danger' to Turkey, not the PKK. I think that the ideas that have been generated by the PKK are much more 'dangerous' than the PKK itself. I think that the Turks have got a major problem on their hands that will not go away by repression," McDowell said.

The majority of PKK militants and sympathizers are now based in Europe, notably in Germany, the Netherlands, Belgium, Romania, and Bulgaria. The party legally operates in Western Europe through affiliated groups and political organizations.

Since 11 September, Turkey has been trying to convince Western countries to officially consider the PKK a terrorist organization. Only the U.S. and Britain have so far agreed. As for the European Union, into which Ankara is seeking admission, it has refused to do so, prompting angry reactions from Turkish politicians and army officials.

Turkey, which refuses to recognize the Kurds as a cultural minority, is being pressed by the EU to grant them greater civil liberties -- especially the right to broadcast in their own language -- as a prerequisite to start accession talks. EU Enlargement Commissioner Guenter Verheugen said recent constitutional amendments on the issue are an improvement but that they still fail to meet European human rights and democracy standards.

Nationalists in Ecevit's coalition government claim that legalizing Kurdish identity might foster separatism and break up the country along ethnic lines. Most Turkish politicians and military leaders insist the PKK should be eliminated before giving in to Kurdish demands.

British historian McDowell believes Turkish leaders are making a mistake by trying to solve the Kurdish issue through coercion:

"I think that [the Turks] make a very serious error of judgment because it strikes me that the problem is no longer a military one. It is a much deeper, more intractable one. The PKK, whilst being defeated on the battlefield, has actually won the much more important struggle about creating national consciousness amongst a large proportion of the Kurdish people in Turkey. And I think this feeling is unlikely to disappear. If the Turks don't do something about this in a positive way, I think they're going to have all sort of troubles in the future. I think that Turkey's obsession with military solutions just misses the point," McDowell said.

Turkish authorities have given mixed signals on how far they would be ready to compromise with the EU on the Kurdish issue. On 14 March, Ecevit said the National Security Council -- Turkey's main decision-making body through which the army wields significant influence over politics -- would discuss soon a proposal to allow limited broadcasting in the Kurdish language on state television.

Yet, authorities continue to close down media outlets broadcasting in languages other than Turkish. In addition, dozens of Kurdish students who were petitioning for education in their native language were arrested recently and charged with separatist activities. Prosecutors have also increased pressure on the pro-Kurdish People's Democracy Party, or HADEP, demanding its closure on the grounds that it is a front for the PKK.

HADEP officials are routinely imprisoned despite their party's legal status. They deny links with the PKK and say their main objective is to seek greater cultural rights for Turkey's 12 million Kurds.

Although HADEP runs three dozen municipalities in Turkey's Kurdistan, including the main city of Diyarbakir, it has no representative in the national parliament. Analysts believe the party represents a much greater force than the PKK.

Hamit Bozarslan is a Turkey analyst at the Paris-based School for Higher Studies in the Social Studies. He told RFE/RL that, although the PKK has been instrumental in fostering Kurdish identity, it no longer carries much weight in the local political arena: "I believe the PKK is no longer in control of the situation. The main change that has occurred in Turkey's Kurdistan is that, up until two years ago, there was one centralized actor, one reference player whose name was the PKK. Now I have the feeling that there is a fragmentation process going on -- which, by the way, could be salutary -- that various initiatives are coming into life. They emanate from civil society; from municipalities that are not controlled by the PKK; from human rights groups that are not supervised by the PKK; and from students, businessmen, and lawyers who are not supervised by the PKK."

Bozarslan believes the PKK -- even if it does decide to adopt new forms of struggle -- is unlikely to regain its influence. He also said that, if Turkish Kurdistan's plea for greater rights continues to remain unheeded in Ankara, many Kurds might be tempted to join groups with more radical views than the PKK, such as the Islamic Hizbullah.

(Radio Free Iraq's Sami Shoresh contributed to this report.)


3. - Kurdistan Observer / Kurdish Media / Znet - "Noam Chomsky's Diyarbakir speech”:

By Noam Chomsky / Mar 31, 2002/ Source: / Yedinci Gündem

If I can open with just a personal remark of my own, it is a very moving experience for me to be here. I have followed as best I can the noble and tragic history of the Kurds in Turkey in past years from everything I can find, particularly in last ten years. But it is quite different to see the actual faces of the people who are resisting and who continue to struggle for freedom and justice.

I have been asked repeatedly to express my opinion about the rights of people to use their mother tongue. As a linguist I have no opinion about the matter. As a human being there is nothing to discuss. It is too obvious. The right to use one's mother tongue freely in every way that one wants -- in literature, in public meetings, in any other form -- that is a primary essential human right. There is nothing further to say about it.

The campaign of the past weeks of the students, mothers, fathers to petition for the right to have elective courses in one's own language is again simply affirming an elementary human right that should not even be under discussion. One can only admire the courage of people who are pressing this campaign in the face of repression and adversity.

Beyond the matter of cultural rights, which are beyond discussion, obvious rights, there lies the world of difficult, intricate questions of political rights. These issues are arising all over the world.

One of the healthy developments now taking place in Europe is the erosion of the nation-state system with increasing regionalization. In areas from Catalonia to Scotland, there is a revival of traditional languages, cultures, customs and a degree of political autonomy leading towards what may become -- and I think should become -- an arrangement of regional areas that are essentially autonomous within a federal framework. In fact something like the old Ottoman empire. There was a lot wrong with the Ottoman empire, but some things about it were basically correct: mainly, the fact that it left a high degree of regional autonomy and independence within a framework, which unfortunately was autocratic and corrupt and brutal, but we can eliminate that part, and the positive aspects of the Ottoman empire probably ought to be reconstructed in some fashion.

And within that kind of framework, which I hope will be evolving, one can, I think, look forward to an autonomous Kurdistan, which can bring together the Kurds of the region, the tens of millions of Kurds of the region, into a self-governing, autonomous, culturally independent, politically active region, as part of a broader federation of -- one hopes - friendly and cooperating national and ethnic and cultural groups.

The next question that arises has to do with the methods of struggle to achieve such ends. Here the primary question is whether these methods should be violent or non-violent. Here we have to distinguish two kinds of questions: moral questions and tactical questions. With regard to the moral questions, my own personal view is that a very heavy burden of proof is required for anyone who advocates or undertakes the use of violence. In my view that burden of proof can very rarely be met. Non-violent protest is more appropriate morally, and tactically as well. However, there is a fundamental principle of non-violence: "you do not preach non-violence unless you are willing to stand alongside to the people who are suffering the repression." Otherwise, you can't give that advice. I'm not in a position to stand next to the people who are suffering repression, so I can only express my opinion, but not give advice.

It's a characteristic of history for oppression to lead to resistance and for resistance often to turn to violent resistance. If it does, that resistance is invariably called terrorism. That's is true for everyone, even the world's worst mass murderers. So the Nazis for example described what they were doing in Europe as defending the population against the terrorism of the partisans. In their eyes, they were defending the legitimate government of France against the terrorist partisans who were directed from abroad. The same with Japanese in Manchuria. They were defending the population from the terrorism of Chinese bandits. Propaganda, no matter how vulgar, always has to have some element of truth in it, if it is to be credible at all. And even in the case of the worst mass murderers like the Nazis or Japanese invaders there was an element of truth to their claims. In some perverse sense their claims were legitimate, and the same can be said about the claims made by others: the United States, Turkey and other countries, who claim to be defending the population against terrorism.

With regard to the concept of terrorism there are really two notions: one is the notion "terror," another is the notion "counter-terror." If you look in, for example, US Army manuals, they define "terror" and they define "counter-terror." And the interesting thing about the definitions is they are virtually identical.

Terrorism turns out to be about the same as counter-terrorism. The main difference is who is the agent of the terrorist violence. If it's someone we don't like, it is terrorism. If it's someone we do like, including ourselves, it is counter-terrorism. But apart from that the definitions of the actions are about the same.

Another important difference between terrorism and counter-terrorism is that what is called "counter-terrorism" is usually carried out by states. It's the terrorism carried out by states. And states have resources that enable them to be far more violent and destructive than private terrorists. So the end result is that the terrorism of states far outweighs that of any other entity in the world. We constantly read that terrorism is the weapon of the weak. That is totally false, the exact opposite of truth. Like any other weapon, terrorism is used much more effectively by the strong, and in particular by more powerful states which are the leaders in terrorism throughout the world, except that they call it "counter-terrorism."

Now we hear every day that there is a "war on terrorism" that has been declared by the most powerful states. In fact that war is re-declared. It was declared in 1981, twenty years ago. When Reagan administration came into office, it declared that the focus of US foreign policy would be state-sponsored international terrorism, the plague of the modern age; they declared that they would drive the evil out of the world. The war has been re-declared with the same rhetoric, and mostly by the same people. Among the leaders of the first "war against terror" twenty years ago are the ones who are directing the current "war against terror," with the same rhetoric and very likely with the same consequences.

The focus of the first war on terrorism was Central America and the Middle East. And both of those regions were scenes of massive terrorism in the 1980s, the major part of it, by far, conducted by the US and its clients and allies, on a scale with few recent precedents in those regions. There is no time to go through the details, but in the Middle East for example, the most extreme terrorist act by far was the Israeli invasion of Lebanon - supported, armed, backed by the United States -- which killed about 20,000 people for political ends. There wasn't any pretence. It was openly recognized in Israel to be a war to promote the US-Israeli policy of assuring effective control over the Israeli-occupied territories. And that's only one example of the terrorism in the region that was either carried out directly or decisively supported by the US, exceeding other cases by a substantial margin.

In Central America, the Reagan administration at first attempted to follow the model of John F. Kennedy in South Vietnam, which would have meant attacking Central America directly, using chemical warfare and napalm, bombing with B52s, and invading with American troops. But they had to draw back from that intention, because the population of the US had become considerably more civilised in the twenty years that intervened, through activism, protest, and organization. Therefore the Reagan administration had to withdraw from direct outright aggression as in South Vietnam, and instead turned to international terrorism.

They created the most extraordinary international terrorist network that the world had ever seen. When a country like Libya wants to conduct a terrorist act, they hire an individual like Carlos the Jackal. When a big powerful state like the US wants to carry out international terrorism, it hires terrorist states: Taiwan, Israel, Argentina under the neo-Nazi generals, Britain, Saudi Arabia. Other terrorist states carry out most of the work, along with local agents. The US supplies the funding and the training and the overall direction.

The effects were horrendous: hundreds of thousands of people killed, every imaginable kind of torture, everything you know about from Southeastern Turkey in the past ten years. And it finally succeeded in crushing popular resistance. There was also a kind of "clash of civilizations" involved, to borrow a currently-fashionable phrase: the US was fighting against the Catholic Church. The Church had made a grave error: it had adopted "preferential option for the poor," a commitment to work for the benefit of poor people, the vast majority. That was unacceptable. The war was to a large extent directed against the Church. The terrible decade opened with the murder of an archbishop. The decade ended with the murder of six leading Jesuit intellectuals. In between, many priests, nuns and layworkers were killed and of course tens of thousands of peasants and workers, women and children, the usual victims.

The terrorism was so extreme that it even led to a condemnation of the US by the World Court for international terrorism, and an order to terminate the crime and pay reparations. There was also a supporting resolution of the Security Council of the United Nations, calling on all states to observe international law, directed to the US, as everyone understood. The World Court decision was simply dismissed with contempt and the war was immediately escalated. The Security Council resolution calling all states to observe international law was vetoed.

All of this is gone from history. It is history, but it is not the history that we hear. Since the same war was re-declared on September 11 -- by many of the same people, with the same rhetoric - there have been endless reams of paper devoted to the new "war on terrorism," but you will have to search very hard to find any reference to what happened during the first "war on terrorism" that the same people carried out. That's gone, and it's gone for very simple reasons: Terrorism is restricted to what they do to us. What we do to them, even it is a thousand times more horrible, doesn't count and it disappears. That's the law of history as long as history is written by the powerful and transmitted by educated classes who choose to be servants of power.

Let me turn to the Middle East. The British of course ran the Middle East for a long time. They were the dominant power, and they had a framework for controlling the region. At first it was controlled by direct armed force. But after World War I, Britain was weakened, and it was no longer in a position to rule the area by direct force. So it turned to other techniques. The military technique it turned to was the use of air power to attack civilians. Air power had just become available, so Britain began bombing civilians with aircraft. Also it turned to poison gas, primarily under the influence of Winston Churchill, who was a really savage monster. Churchill, as colonial Secretary, ordered the use of poison gas against what he called "uncivilised tribes": that's Kurds and Afghans. He ordered the use of poison gas against these "uncivilised tribes" because, he said, it will cause a "lively terror" and will save British lives. That's the military side. It's worth remembering that poison gas was the ultimate atrocity after World War I.

The details of this we are not going to learn. The reason is that ten years ago the British government declared an "open government policy," to make the government more transparent so the people, citizens could learn more about it. The first act of the open government policy was to remove from the Public Records office all the documents having to do with the use of poison gas against the uncivilised tribes. So that history is gone.

There was also a political side to the control of region. The British concept was to create what they called a "Arab façade": that means weak states that would depend on British for support and would serve as a "constitutional fiction" behind which the British would exert actual rule.

When the US displaced Brtain it essentially took over the British model. The region is to be run by an Arab façade of weak, corrupt states, which rely on outside support for their survival; they are to administer the region. In the background is the US with its military muscle when it is needed. And the US has a kind of attack dog, which is called "England," and sometimes seems as much an independent country as Ukraine was under Soviet rule. Its main function is to carry out the services it learned during its centuries of experience - the services described by the leading British statesman Lloyd George, who wrote in secret that "We have to reserve the right to bomb the niggers." That's important, and that's the British role when the master need some assistance, or the pretense that it is acting for the "international community" - a term that means the US and whatever other country agrees to go along.

The US did add an innovation. It added an intermediate level of peripheral states, states that would be "local cops on the beat" in the words of the Nixon Administration, who used the American idiom: the "local cops on the beat" are the police who are working in the streets. In this case, the "local cops" are subsidiary states. Police headquarters is in Washington. Turkey was the first one. Turkey is the "local cop on the beat," with the task of ensuring that the Arab façade is protected from their own population, the most dangerous enemy. Turkey was one of these, Iran under the Shah was another. After 1967, when Israel destroyed the centre of Arab nationalism, it joined the alliance. Pakistan was a member for a long time. The idea is to have non-Arab states that are militarily powerful, and can protect the Arab façade from indigenous forces that have strange ideas: for example, the idea that the wealth and resources of the region should go to them, instead of going to rich people in the West and their local associates. Such ideas are called "radical nationalism" and they have to be suppressed: by the "local cops on the beat," who have the first responsibility, and if they are not a sufficient threat then the US and the attack dog move in, using the local cops as bases.

Oil was the primary reason for the concern over the Middle East. There is now a secondary reason, which is quite important. That's water, which is enormously important, and will be even more so in the future as water resources are being depleted. Here the role of Turkey becomes even more essential, because Turkey, and particularly the southeast region of Turkey, is the major source of water for the region. And control over water also provides what US planners 50 years ago called "veto power," just like control over oil. If you can terminate the flow of water to other countries, that will bring them into line. That's presumably a significant purpose of the dams and other projects: to ensure that control over water will be in hands of US clients, which will ensure control over the region and probably a veto power over recalcitrant elements.

The enormous US support for the massive atrocities of the 1990s in this region, which are some of the worst in the world in this period, is based on the role of Turkey within the US system of domination of the region. It's not out of love of the Turks. It is out of love for the services that Turkey can perform in the region. If Turkey succumbs to "radical nationalism" - that is, independence - it will suffer the same fate. The same is true of US support for Israel and other client states. If they perform their function they are fine. If they get out of line it will be different. We see that right next door in Iraq. As long as Saddam Huseyin was only gassing Kurds and torturing dissidents and massacring people on a huge scale, he was just fine. Britain and the US continued to support him. After his worst atrocities they even continued to provide him with the means of developing weapons of mass destruction, along with aid and assistance that he badly needed, until he made a mistake: he disobeyed orders. That's unacceptable, so he therefore has to go, probably to be replaced by some similar figure. And the same is true for other client states. They are acceptable no matter how many atrocities they carry out as long as they continue to fulfil their functions within the world system: to ensure that the rich and powerful receive what they deserve, namely the wealth of the region and its resources and markets, and so on.

Let's turn briefly to the last topic: September 11th. What we hear constantly is that after September 11th, everything changed. There is a good rule of thumb: if something is repeated over and over as obvious, the chances are that it is obviously false.

In this case, after September 11th very little has changed. Policy, goals, concerns and interests of the great powers remain as they were. There have been some changes. For one thing, there is now a window of opportunity for harsh and repressive elements throughout the world to pursue their policies with increased intensity, exploiting the fear and concerns of their populations, and expecting support from Washington.

As always repression elicits resistance, and that's true in this case too. In the US, contrary to what the headlines and intellectual commentary tell you, since September 11th the population has become more open, more questioning, more dissident, more involved in protests, more concerned with ongoing developments. The same is true worldwide. Two weeks ago there was an international conference in Brazil, the World Social Forum, which brought together about 60,000 people from around the world, from popular movements, farmers, workers, environmentalists, women's groups, all kinds of people. They organized many very serious and constructive forums and discussions devoted to major problems of the world. This is the core of the worldwide popular opposition that is designing, and seeking to implement, programs that run counter to the global policies of transferring even more wealth and power to hands in which wealth and power are already concentrated.

The same is true right here. In Turkey, both Turks and Kurds are resisting courageously, working for changes that will make the society more open, liberal, free and just. They are a model that Western human right activists admire and should learn from. They are providing an inspiring example of what can be done under extremely harsh conditions to overcome repression and state violence to create a more decent and humane society. Their struggles and their goals are an inspiration for others to do more. And again, that's why it is tremendous privilege and honour personally for me to stay with you for a few days here.

As you know Kurdish language has been suppressed in Turkey, and is has been kept out of the educational system. What is the relationship between personal identity and the mother tongue? On the one side there is widespread use of English as a global language, and on the other there is a revival of local languages as a counter-trend to globalisation. In this context, how do you assess the revival of native languages in Europe and elsewhere?

In Spain under the Franco regime, the local languages were suppressed. People could not speak Basque or Catalan, or other languages. And they are separate languages, not Spanish; Basque is not even related to Spanish. After Fascism was overthrown, there was a revival of these languages, which of course had never disappeared. People still spoke them in their homes, with their friends when the secret police was not listening. And they revived. I will tell you a personal experience: one of my daughters was living in Spain after the fall of Franco regime. She was living in Barcelona, and when I was in Europe speaking I went to visit her. This was two years after the fall of Franco, and there wasn't a sign of Catalan. Everything on the streets was Spanish, the signs were Spanish, everyone on the street spoke Spanish, just travelling there you would not know that the language of the people was Catalan. I went back five years later and there was no Spanish, there was only Catalan: the street signs were Catalan, the books were Catalan, the school system was Catalan, the language just revived. The same thing is happening in the Basque country and other places. And elsewhere, for example, inside the UK. So, Welsh for example, was not heard much not very long ago. Now if you go to Wales and listen to children coming out of the school, they are talking Welsh. The language has been revived. It is a part of a healthy movement within Europe away from the nation-state system towards what is sometimes called a "Europe of the Regions," a federation of regional areas with their own language, culture, political autonomy within a bigger federation. And that's extremely healthy. What the questioner said about personal identity is quite true. Your personal identity is very closely tied to your native language. If this is a language which is not permitted to be freely used for communication, for talk, for expression, for literature, for song, for any purpose, that's an infringement on your fundamental human rights. And it diminishes you as a person. Therefore it has to be preserved and recovered, and this can be done, as is happening in many places. The question of what will happen to local languages is a largely a matter of choice, not a matter of historical forces that are out of control. There was no way of predicting that Welsh would again become the language of the people of Wales, their literature and so on.

There was no way of predicting that. It happened because they chose to achieve that result. Regionalization is taking place in Europe in reaction to the centralization of the EU. And I suspect that reaction to the centralization of what's called "globalisation" will also include a revival of local languages, cultures, interest groups of all kinds, for example feminist groups that don't have any geographical boundary. But that has to be achieved. Nothing is going to happen by itself. It has to be achieved like all other human rights by dedication, commitment and struggle. Otherwise it won't happen.

As for English becoming an international language, that's a separate matter. It's a matter of who has been dominant. English is a world language because England and the US conquered the world. As the world becomes more diversified, and I suspect it will, there will be other languages of international communication. That's quite apart from the question of the revival and the vitality of the regional and local cultures, languages, and literatures, and so on. These developments can quite go on quite in parallel.

How do you define the notion of "freedom"?

I would not even try. It's a fundamental basic concept that we understand but we can't define. We understand such concepts, but can't hope to define them in words. We define them by our actions and by our commitment. Freedom is what we make of it. If we stand against repression, authority and illegitimate structures, we are expanding the domain of freedom, and that's what freedom will be. That's what we create; there is nothing to define in words.

In the "new world order" of US hegemony, under what kind of treats is the notion of "culture"?

It's a matter of will and choice. History doesn't have natural laws the way physics does. It depends on what people decide and choose. That's why nobody can ever predict anything. If you look at the record of prediction in human affairs, you find they can't predict anything. The main reason is that too much depends on will, choice, determination and commitment. So what will happen to cultural freedom under new global conditions depends on what people like you decide to do. If you create and maintain vital and vigorous independent cultures, they'll exist. If you decide not to, if you want to just listen to Brazilian soap operas and drink soft drinks, they will disappear. But there is a choice.

You are a US citizen who know to say "NO!". We read from your biographies that you have been an anti-systemic dissident since you are ten years old. What is the secret in this?

The secret is very simple. For hundreds of years in the US, as elsewhere, people have been struggling hard to enlarge the domain of freedom and justice and there have been successes. And the result is that people like me are lucky. We can enjoy the privilege of enjoying the freedom that has been won. These are not gifts, they are not in the Constitution, they are not in the Bill of Rights. James Madison, one of the main founders of the US system said that a "parchment barrier" will not defend against repression. Take any nice words you like, you have to give them their meaning, and the meaning is given by struggle and commitment. And it has been done over the centuries to a very significant extent. The result is that people in the US have freedom to a larger extent. The secret is to have a history behind you of people who dedicated themselves to creating a relatively free society. That's the secret.

What do you think, is the role of US in Kurdish Problem in general and in the handing over of Kurdish leader to Turkey by an international conspiracy, in particular?

The US has a role in just about anything that happens in the world. It is the most powerful state in the world. It is concerned with developments here and it is undoubtfully involved in Kurdish affairs. Not just here, the same in Iraq. For example, the US supported a Kurdish uprising in Iraq, back in the early 70's, until a certain point came when an Iranian-Iraqi deal was made and the US decided to sell the Kurds out, and they were slaughtered. After that Henry Kissenger, who was in charge, was criticised in Congress for having first supported the Kurdish struggle and then abandoning them when they were no longer useful, resulting in slaughter. He made a famous comment, which was something like this: "Foreign policy should not be confused with missionary work." The same has been true here, in a particularly shameful way in very recent years.

As you know the Kurdish opposition turned to peaceful means of struggle. What do you think about this new policy?

You know better than I do. This is not the first time. In 1993, a ceasefire was declared by the Kurdish opposition. The EU tried to pressure Turkey to respond constructively to it. Instead, the Turkish government, with crucial US support, escalated the war. That led to years of further atrocities and destruction. There is now another move towards a peaceful political settlement. It's the right move in my opinion. The question arises what will be the reaction of the Turkish government, and this heavily depends on the US. Will there be constructive reactions? We have to try to make that be the case. As people in US, we have to try in our own way. It can develop further. It's the right direction, and I think it will lead to a fruitful outcome.

As you know, there is a "Meeting of Civilizations" in Istanbul, where Kurdish civilization has not been represented. This meeting is supposed to be an antithesis to the "Clash of Civilisations". What is your opinion about the thesis of "clash of civilizations?"

The fact that the Kurdish civilisation was not represented is for the same reason as the fact that Palestinian civilisation was not represented, or any other repressed group. These are meetings of powerful states and other powerful forces in the world. They don't represent anyone but themselves, and furthermore they don't represent civilisations. The lives of the Saudi Arabian elite probably center in London, and that is where they belong. It's probably where they will flee if there is an internal uprising they can't control. They have little relation to the people of Saudi Arabia, just as the ruling elites of other countries have little relation to their own population. The US government, for example, certainly does not represent the US population. The population in US strongly opposes some of the most important and basic policies pursued by the government, which therefore have to be pursued in secret. The talk about civilizations is mostly propaganda.

As for Islam being considered the enemy, that is surely not true. In the 1980's the major foreign policy issue in US that dominated all discussion was the wars in Central America, and these were wars fought against Catholic Church, not Islam. The Catholic Church in Latin America, after centuries of serving the rich, had moved towards an effort to serve the poor, and at once it became an enemy. Many terrorist atrocities were directed against the Church. Was there a Clash of Civilizations? No. At the same time, US was strongly supporting the most reactionary Islamic state in the world, namely Saudi Arabia, which has been a US client since its origins.

The US was also organizing the most extreme radical Islamists it could find in the world, because they were best killers, and was using them as weapons against Russia. Indonesia, the biggest Islamic state, was a wonderful friend ever since president Suharto took over in 1965 and carried out a huge mass slaughter killing maybe a million people, mostly peasants. He immediately became a great friend, and remained so while he committed some of the worst crimes of the modern era. In 1995, the Clinton administration described Suharto as 'our kind of guy.' True enough. The world does not break down into clashes of civilisations, it breaks down into power interests that cross languages and cultures, and mostly are fighting against their own populations. The notion of "clash of civilisations" became popular after the end of the Cold War when some new propaganda framework was needed in order to mobilize people. It does not mean anything beyond that.

What is the probability of a US attack on Iraq? How will this effect Turkey and the Kurds?

This is an important issue that is in the agenda nowadays. There are two kinds of reasons for a possible US attack on Iraq. The first is domestic, internal to the US. If you were an advisor to the Bush administration, what would you say? Would you say, "try to focus people's attention on the Enron Scandal, and the fact that the proposed tax cuts for the rich will undermine all social programs and will leave most of the population in serious trouble? Is that what you want the people to pay attention to, policies like these? Obviously not. What you want is for people to be frightened, to huddle under the umbrella of power, not to pay attention to what you are doing to them while serving the interests of narrow rich and powerful sectors. So you want to have a military conflict. That's the domestic side.

In the international side, Iraq has the second largest reserves of oil in the world. The first is Saudi Arabia, Iraq is the second. US certainly will not give up control of this huge source of power and wealth. Furthermore, right now, if the Iraqi oil were to come back into the international system, it would be largely under the control of Russia, France and others, not US energy companies. And the US is not going to permit that. So we can be pretty confident that one way or another the US is trying to ensure that Iraq will re-enter to the international system under US control. Now, how do you achieve this? Well, one plan, and this plan has been discussed in Turkey as you know, is for the US to use Turkey as a mercenary military force to conquer Northern Iraq with ground troops while the US bombs from 20,000 feet, The compensation for Turkey could be that it will get control of the oil resources of Musul and Kerkuk, which it has always regarded as part of Turkey. And for the US, that will block its enemies -- Russia, France and others -- from having privileged access to the oil of that region. Meanwhile the US will take over the South in some fashion.

What happens to the Kurds?

I hate to think about it. It will probably be a terrible slaughter of one kind or another. They will be right in the middle of this. For Turkey, apart from the question of right and wrong, it would be a very dangerous move. And it's a very dangerous move for the US as well, if only because it could blow up the whole region. It could lead to a revolution in Saudi Arabia. Nobody knows.

Elements of the Bush administration are pursuing these and similar plans, and you can see the logic. Whether they will be allowed to implement such plans is another story. I'm rather sceptical. I think the arguments against it are probably too strong. But they don't know themselves, and surely no one else can.


4. - AFP - "Death toll in Turkish prison hunger strike rises to 50":

ISTANBUL / April 1

The death toll in a long-standing hunger strike by prisoners protesting controversial jail reforms in Turkey reached 50 when a woman detainee died in hospital here on Monday, a human rights activist said.

Meryem Altun, 26, had been fasting for 301 days when she died, a spokeswoman for the Turkish Human Rights Association (IHD) told AFP. Guzel was jailed after being charged with membership of a far-left underground group, the Revolutionary People's Liberation Front-Party (DHKP-C), which is deemed to be the chief architect of the hunger strike.

Prisoners launched their hunger strike in October 2000 to protest against the introduction of high-security prisons, in which cells for one to three people replaced large dormitories for dozens of inmates. Backed by rights groups, protesters say the new arrangement leaves them socially isolated and more vulnerable to torture and maltreatment. The government, however, has categorically ruled out a return to the dormitory system, arguing that it was the main reason behind frequent riots and hostage-taking incidents in the country's unruly jails.

The death toll from the strike includes both prisoners and outside supporters of the movement. Four prisoners burned themselves to death in support of the strike and another four people died last November in a police raid on an Istanbul house occupied by hunger strikers.


5. - AFP - "Turkey hopes to be ready for EU accession talks by year-end":

ANKARA / March 31

Foreign Minister Ismail Cem expressed hope Sunday that Turkey would become ready by the end of 2002 to open accession talks with the European Union, reports said Sunday. In an interview with the CNN-Turk news channel, Cem said that setting a date for the start of the talks could become possible at the EU Copenhagen summit in December at the end of the presidency of Denmark, which will take over from Spain in July.

"Turkey could come to the point (of being ready) to start accession talks at the end of the year. I see such a possibility," Cem said. "Of course, this also depends on what we do at home," he added. Turkey, an EU membership candidate since 1999, is the only country among the 13 hopefuls that has not yet accomplished the required reforms to start

accession talks with Brussels. Ankara has undertaken a series of reforms to mend its crippled democracy, but EU officials as well as domestic critics have considered them inadequate. The need to improve the rights of the sizable Kurdish minority has proved particularly painful for Turkey, as many fear that such reforms could fan separatist sentiment among Kurds.

The government of Prime Minister Bulent Ecevit has failed to reach an agreement on a key EU norm -- the abolition of the death penalty for all crimes -- and has so far been reluctant to take steps to legalize broadcasts and education in Kurdish.


6. - BBC - "Turkey considers Kurdish broadcasts":

Kurds say the language is an essential part of their identity

ISTANBUL / Jonny Dymond / 29 March

On Friday Turkey's national security council will debate whether to allow the broadcast of a Kurdish language on radio and television.

The language which is used by Turkey's 12 million strong Kurdish minority has for years been banned from the airwaves.

But the European Union has demanded that Turkey grant its Kurdish population more rights if Turkey is to become a member state.

Some have suggested that state television and radio should set aside some time, maybe an hour everyday, for Kurdish broadcasting.

The nationalist party the MHP, has said it is against that, but the alternative is pretty unpalatable for the government - that a private station be allowed to broadcast from Turkish soil in the Kurdish language.

Separatist act

Kurdish TV and radio stations in Turkey are frequently closed down. The only station that broadcasts in Kurdish without interruption is based in Paris.

The authorities say that Kurdish language broadcasting is a separatist act which attacks the unity of the state.

Kurds, some of whom speak nothing but Kurdish, say the language is an essential part of their identity.

If the ban is relaxed and the law is subsequently changed, for Turkey it will be a major act of liberalisation.


7. - Turkish Daily News - "17,000 signatures to stop death fasts":

ANKARA / 2 April

The Human Rights Association on Monday presented 17,000 signatures, collected in the "Three Doors, Three Locks" campaign to put an end to death fasts, to Parliamentary Human Rights Committee Chairman Huseyin Akgul.

Akgul said that the interlocutor of the issue was in fact the Justice Ministry, adding that he would transfer the signatures to them. Commenting on the continuing death fasts in the prisons, Akgul noted that they were making attempts to stop them, but added that they have so far failed to obtain an outcome.

Human Rights Association Chairman Husnu Ondul thanked Akgul for his tolerant and democratic approach and hoped that the dialogue between nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) and the State would further improve. Stressing that death fasts could only be stopped in this way, Ondul said that a total of 89 people have lost their lives during the fasts and added that 450 convicts and prisoners have developed the illness known as 'Korsakoff Syndrome", because of their actions.

Human Rights Association members stage a sit-in to protest F-type prisons

Meanwhile, a group of Human Rights Association members and the relatives of some of the F-type prison convicts staged a sit-in in front of the association's Ankara branch to protest the F-type prisons.

The protesters called on the government to remove the isolation in F-type prisons in order to stop deaths. They unfolded banners reading, "The three doors and locks should be opened. Deaths should be stopped."

Hundreds of leftist prisoners and many of their supporters started the death fasts more than a year ago, protesting plans to introduce new F-type prisons with small cells. The protestors say the cells isolate prisoners and leave them open to abuse. The government says the new prisons meet European standards and refuses to negotiate with the protesters. The strikers have prolonged their protest by drinking sugared and salted water and taking vitamins to help them stay alive.


8. - Turkish Daily News - "Eris: 'EU does not want to divide Turkey'":

IKV Chairman Meral Gezgin Eris, stating that the lack of consensus between the government partners, and the separation of some circles over full EU membership were not helpful, said 'It is not logical to say that the EU wants to divide Turkey'

ISTANBUL / by GUZIN YILDIZCAN / 2 April

Turkey became an EU candidate country after beginning the implementation of the National Program one year ago. Now the goal is to start membership negotiations at the end of 2002. To start membership negotiations, Turkey should complete the adaptation work that will fulfil the requirements of the National Program. During this critical period, full membership debates have recently begun in Turkey.

Economic Development Foundation (IKV) Chairman Meral Gezgin Eris, who stated that the grounds for these debates were not helpful, recalled that Turkey's full EU membership goal had been determined in 1963 with the Ankara Agreement.

Eris, at a press meeting she organized yesterday in Istanbul, said "Turkey's goal is to accelerate work to start full membership negotiations at the end of 2002." She said that to debate this goal in Turkey was a fault.

"The work which has been implemented, first revealed the lack of consensus between the government and the EU, and caused different circles to be separated into groups over the full membership goal. It is seen that such discussions, which negatively affect adaptation work, will not develop Turkey's EU vision and will create political or economic worries," Eris stated.

Eris stated that arguments, such as the Copenhagen criteria being overlooked; EU adaptation work meaning submission to the EU; the EU not accepting Turkey as a full member, even if adaptation were to be provided in all areas; and suspicions that the EU's major aim was to divide Turkey, were not logical. Recalling that the Copenhagen criteria were not aimed dividing the country, and were valid for all EU candidate countries, Eris said "These criteria, which include basic principles such as the superiority of democracy and law, respect for human rights and a healthy free market economy, should be adopted by contemporary Turkey."

Death penalty should be lifted

IKV, which prepared the National Program Watching Report, presented the report to press members at the meeting yesterday. Eris stated that most of the EU adaptation work had been completed, but that there were many things still to be done, and said "We do not have unlimited time to complete the work. At the end of 2002, the EU will determine whether to start Turkey's full membership negotiations."

Recalling that without fulfilling the Copenhagen criteria, it was impossible to start full membership negotiations, Eris said the following should definitely be done:

-Changes should be made to the Supreme Board of Radio and Television (RTUK); decisions which restricted the freedom of judges should be reconsidered; the Supreme Board of Judges and Prosecutors should be reestablished; and international agreements should be approved as soon as possible.

-The death penalty should be lifted; broadcasting and education rights in native language should be given; and the Emergency Rule Law (OHAL) should be lifted.

-Turkey should continue to support meetings for the resolution of the Cyprus problem.

-Arrangements for tax and bank reforms should be completed.