What is the PKK ?
The PKK (Kurdish acronym for the
"Kurdistan Workers' Party"), formed in 1978 by Abdullah Öcalan, is the most
notorious terror organization in the world. It has been waging a vicious
campaign of terror against Turkey since 1984 with the external support of
certain states and circles whose aim is to destabilize Turkey.
The PKK was identified as one of
the 30 main terrorist organizations in the world by the US Secretary of State in
October 1997, and it was also described in the same way in US State Department
"Patterns of Global Terrorism" reports.
PKK's terrorist activities have
resulted, to date, in the death of thousands of people, including women, the
elderly, children and in many instances even infants. The PKK has also murdered
over one hundred school teachers, who became inevitable targets of the
terrorists since it was judged that PKK's subversive views could be most easily
imposed on the uneducated and the ignorant. Lists giving the figures of ordinary
individuals and public servants, ruthlessly killed or maimed by the PKK
terrorists, are in annex.
The PKK has employed murder,
intimidation, kidnapping and destruction to achieve its nefarious objectives. It
targets ordinary people, because it aims to subjugate the local population in
southeastern Turkey into supporting its evil deeds. The PKK has attacked the
entire inhabitants of villages in southeast Anatolia. These attacks are also
designed to make the region uninhabitable. The PKK destroys schools, sets
forests on fire, blows up railways and bridges, plants mines on roads, burns
down construction machinery, and demolishes health centers. A list containing
the figures of material damage caused by PKK's terrorist attacks is also in
annex.
In response, the authorities
trained the villagers to defend themselves and also moved some people to
locations where they would be safer. These two measures, intended to protect the
local population against terrorism, have been at the center of a misinformation
campaign by the PKK and its sympathizers.
The PKK indiscriminately murders
the very people on whose behalf it purports to act : Turkish citizens of Kurdish
origin. Ironically, the PKK regards Masud Barzani's Kurdish
PKK Terrorism : Ministry of
Foreign Affairs Publication
Democratic Party and Jalal
Talabani's Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, the two main Kurdish groupings in
northern Iraq, as its adversaries.
Due to its ability to strike
Turkey from Syria and (after the 1991 Gulf War) northern Iraq, the PKK proved
for some time a serious threat to law and order and claimed many victims.
Following its operations against PKK facilities in northern Iraq Turkey restored
law and order throughout the southeastern provinces.
The PKK has been supported and
sheltered by some of Turkey's neighbors, as well as by some others outside the
region. Syria and Greece are the principal countries that have been supporting
the PKK for years. However, with the signing of Adana memorandum on October 20,
1998, the Syrian connection has been broken. Syrian authorities have promised
not to support terrorist activities against Turkey and taken some steps in this
direction. Turkey closely monitors Syrian compliance with the Adana agreement.
Yet, Greece, a NATO ally, backs the PKK and its affiliates by every means at its
disposal. Confessions and testimonies of dozens of PKK militants arrested in
Turkey reveal that Greek support to PKK terrorism goes much beyond than what was
generally estimated. Most recently, revelations made by the PKK member Fethi
Demir and by Şemdin Sakık, PKK's "second man" captured in northern Iraq, have
helped to confirm concretely the continuing Greek support to the PKK. The
statement made by Greek Premier Simitis on November 26, 1998, leaves no room for
doubt about the position of Greece vis-a-vis the PKK : "the PKK is an
organization fighting for the rights of the Kurdish minority and using various
means to reach this end." Can there be a more explicit approval of PKK
terrorism? There is of course other evidence and documentation concerning Grek
support to PKK terrorism.
The PKK terrorist organization,
among others, employs the following methods in the perpetration of its
crimes:
a) Indiscriminate terror against
the Turkish citizens of Kurdish ethnic origin mainly in southeastern Turkey.
Targets included children, women, and the elderly. In some places PKK terrorists
have wiped out isolated, dispersed settlements and hamlets. The aim is to force
the local population into submission, to make them provide
sanctuary.
b) Indiscriminate terror against
non-Kurdish population. The purpose is to discredit the state institutions and
to cause instability.
c) Terror against selected
targets.
- Assassination of well known personalities,
judicial, law enforcement and security personnel.
- Assassination of state functionaries that
provide services to the local population in southeastern Turkey (civil
servants, teachers, health personnel, technical personnel, etc.).
- Assassination of village guardsmen and their
families.
- Attacks on and occupation of official
missions of Turkey abroad (diplomatic, consular, commercial, tourism, etc.) as
well as headquarters or branch offices of semi-official institutions (Turkish
Airlines offices, banks, etc.).Attacks and acts of arson against the houses,
business facilities, associations and mosques of the Turkish community living
in western Europe, mainly in Germany. These acts of terror are mostly carried
out through proxies and front organizations that are permitted by the
authorities of the host countries to operate in those states.
d) Terror within the ranks of the
PKK, against informants and repentant militants. Over the years, Öcalan has
ordered the killing of numerous PKK defectors and potential
rivals.
In the past decade, the PKK has
conducted assassinations, kidnappings and acts of arson in Western Europe
against former PKK members and defectors. Assassinations of PKK defectors
occurred in Sweden in 1984 and 1985; in Denmark in 1985; in the Netherlands in
1987 and 1989; in Germany in 1986, 1987, and 1988.
e) Wider hit and run tactics
against border posts and military patrols.
f) Terrorist attacks against
industrial infrastructure, oil facilities, social facilities, and tourist sites
with the aim of weakening the Turkish economy and tarnishing its image. As part
of these terror acts, the PKK bombed passenger trains, ferryboats, and
buses.
Several of these attacks resulted
in civilian casualties. In 1993 and 1994 it also staged a series of kidnappings
of foreigners in southeastern Turkey to frighten away tourists and to embarrass
the Turkish government.
g) The head of the terrorist
organization PKK has advocated and ordered the use of suicide bombings against
Turkish targets that resulted in the deaths of security personnel and civilians,
and injuries to many more.
Obviously, such an enterprise of
crime and violence like the PKK requires colossal human and financial resources.
As there are no legitimate ways or means to obtain the required resources, PKK's
only option is to resort to illegal and illegitimate methods. Hence, the PKK is
heavily engaged in organized crime activities, including extortion, drug
trafficking, arms smuggling, human smuggling (illegal immigration), and
abduction of children. Such racketeering takes place particularly in western
Europe.
The PKK has been carrying out its
activities abroad through its front organization ERNK (Kurdish acronym for the
"Kurdistan National Liberation Front"), the so-called "Kurdistan Parliament in
Exile", its mouthpiece MED TV, and through other affiliated offices, centers and
associations.
Through these front
establishments, the PKK organizes and carries out its illegal activities. It
also uses them to make its propaganda so as to influence and mislead the public
opinion in west European countries for obtaining popular support to its
subversive ends.
The abduction of children and
youngsters in some European countries by these front organizations deserves
special mention. According to police reports and press articles in several west
European countries, the PKK recently organized kidnappings of children, of 14-17
years of age, in Varmland/Sweden through the ERNK, and in Celle/Germany through
"Kurdish Information Bureaus", or "Kurdish Culture Centers". The statements of
some of the abducted children, as well as press and police reports reveal that
the PKKkidnapped these youngsters, took them to its camps, located in some other
west European countries, and forced them into training as terrorist militants.
The Turkish authorities spared no effort in drawing the attention of the west
European countries to such criminal and illegal activities of the PKK, but
unfortunately their calls to prevent these activities usually fell on deaf ears.
The complaints of the children's families, however, attracted the attention of
the public and thus created a strong reaction towards what the PKK and its
affiliates have in fact been doing for years. The police in Sweden and Germany
are now investigating the matter.
Terrorism constitutes today one of
the most serious violations of human rights, in particular the fundamental right
to life. By murdering thousands of people, the PKK has violated the right to
life. Therefore, all the PKK terrorists, including their head
Öcalan,
must answer in the court of law
for their crimes.
All societies threatened by
terrorism have the right to take appropriate measures to protect themselves from
violence and to eradicate terrorism. Turkey's fight against the PKK terrorism is
of this nature and aims not only to maintain security and to protect its
citizens, but also to pave the way for economic and social development in the
regions where this is needed most. This fight against terrorism observes
democratic principles and the rule of law, with great care being given to
respect the rights of innocent civilians.
Who is Abdullah Öcalan
?
Abdullah Öcalan was born in the
province of Sanliurfa in 1949. He speaks Turkish and has only a poor grasp of
some Kurdish dialects. He had a conventional education and his original wish was
to be an officer in the Turkish Army. He failed the entrance examination for the
military academy. He did, however, gain admission in 1971 to the Ankara
University Political Sciences Faculty. There, he joined the underground
movements trying to overthrow Turkey's parliamentary system. He was expelled
from the university for non-attendance and his illegal
activities.
The cell of terrorists which he
controlled soon broke links with other groups. It was known for its use of
extreme violence and the "Apocu's" (Followers of Abdullah Öcalan), as the PKK
was called in its early days, had a special trademark: they hacked off
the
noses of their opponents. In the
late 1970's, Öcalan collaborated closely with the Soviet Union and with Syria
which were attempting to create political turmoil in Turkey. In 1980, Öcalan
fled to Syria. He began to use Syrian facilities, including camps in the Bekaa
Valley, Lebanese territory under Syrian control, to train terrorist groups for
crossborder terrorist attacks against targets in Turkey. He started to inject an
ethnic dimension to his terrorist activities, though this usually had to be
imposed on local populations by violent means, including the kidnapping young
men at gun point and then forcing them to undergo indoctrination and join his
movement. In August 1984, Öcalan's terrorist groups began attacking Turkish
police stations and similar targets in the southeastern provinces north of the
border with Syria and Iraq.
The PKK operates along the
familiar lines of traditional communist parties and carries out terrorist
activities under the rigid direction of its Central Committee. Both its
"political" and "military" wings are controlled directly by Öcalan. As its sole
head, Öcalan, has callously masterminded thousands of PKK's terrorist activities
against Turkey and its people. As such, he has been responsible for thousands of
deaths, kidnappings, mutilations and attacks on innocent people during his long
years as a Professional terrorist and murderer.
In October 1998, Turkey warned
Syria that it would take action unless it ceased its support for Öcalan and PKK
terrorism. It formally requested the extradition of Öcalan to Turkey. As a
result, Öcalan was compelled to leave Syria where he had been given shelter for
almost two decades. Furthermore, by an agreement signed between the two
countries on October 20, 1998 in Adana/Turkey, the Syrian Government for the
first time designated the PKK as a terrorist organization, and pledged not to
allow the presence and the activities of the PKK on its territory. Later, Öcalan
was forced to leave Moscow, where he had escaped from Syria, following political
and diplomatic contacts between Turkey and the Russian
Federation.
Öcalan was apprehended in Rome
while trying to illegally enter Italy with a false passport on November 12,
1998. As the British Government put it, Öcalan's arrest was "a
significant advance in the international community's fight against
terrorism."
Öcalan is not only a terrorist but
also a common criminal, being sought by the Turkish courts under charges of
homicide and incitement to homicide. There is thus a red corner bulletin for him
issued by the Interpol. In accordance with a court decision given in 1990,
Germany also had an arrest warrant on Öcalan again for homicide and incitement
to homicide. All democratic, law-abiding countries as well as international
institutions are obligated to take a consistent and firm stance in combating
terrorism and bringing terrorists to justice. Under obligations and commitments
within the framework of the United Nations, the Council of Europe, the OSCE, the
NATO, and the EU, no country or government can provide terrorists with
safe-haven or evade its responsibilities in the efforts to eliminate terrorism.
Therefore, Öcalan should never be granted political asylum anywhere and he has
to be extradited to Turkey to face trial for his crimes against Turkish
citizens.
PKK's Involvement in Organized
Crimes
The PKK engages in organized
crimes such as drug trafficking and arms smuggling, extortion, human smuggling,
abduction of children and money laundering in an attempt to recruit militants
and to obtain financial resources needed to carry out its terrorist
activities.
The "Sputnik Operation"
conducted in a coordinated fashion in some European countries in September 1996
exposed PKK's links with organized crime and money laundering
activities.
On the other hand, it is known
that the PKK, together with other organized crime gangs, is also behind the
recent wave of illegal immigration to Italy. PKK's objective is to create
international pressure and antipathy against Turkey.
Moreover, the PKK plays an
important role in drug trafficking which constitutes one of the most evil crimes
of our age. The British weekly magazine "The Spectator" underlined this fact in
its 28 November-5 December 1998 issue by saying that "…According to the British
security services sources the PKK is responsible for 40 percent of the heroin
sold in the European Union…" .
Drug Trafficking and Terrorist
Organizations
All terrorist organizations need
to raise funds to sustain their violent activities and resort to illegal means
to finance their crimes. Drug trafficking comes at the top of this list of
illegal money raising activities, followed by robbery, extortion, kidnapping,
blackmailing and arms smuggling.
In recent years, it has become
increasingly evident that terrorism and drug trafficking are intertwined. The
terms "narco-terrorism" and "narco-terrorists" have started to gain circulation
in describing the link between terrorist organizations and narcotics smugglers.
This fact is illustrated by certain international documents. The UN Convention
Against Illicit Traffic In Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances (1988)
refers to the relationship between illicit drug traffic and other organized
criminal activities which undermine the stability, security and legitimacy of
sovereign states.
Paragraph 5 of the UN
International Narcotics Control Board (INCB)'s 1992 report points out that
"illicit cultivation of narcotic plants and illicit trafficking in drugs
continue to be a threat to the political, economic and social stability
of several countries. Links appear to exist between illicit cultivation
and drug trafficking and the activities of subversive organizations in some
countries." The 1993 INCB report draws attention to the organic connections
between drug cartels and terrorist organizations, and also to the globalization
of drug smuggling. The successive INCB reports point out that these drug cartels
concentrate their activities in ethnically and economically troubled regions of
the world. It is no coincidence that terrorist organizations thrive in the very
same regions. The Vienna Declaration and Program of Action adopted at the World
Conference on Human Rights (25 June 1993) stresses that "the acts, methods
and practices of terrorism in all its forms and manifestations as well as
linkage in some countries to drug trafficking are activities aimed at the
destruction of human rights, fundamental freedoms and democracy, threatening
territorial integrity, security of states and destabilizing legitimately
constituted governments, and the international community should take the
necessary steps to enhance cooperation to prevent and combat
terrorism."
The Final Communiqué of the
Council of Europe Pompidou Group 2nd Pan-European Ministerial Conference
(Strasbourg, 4 February 1994) underlines the fact that "considering the
continuous increase in and the spread of drug trafficking incidents, the
involvement of violent organizations in such activities constitute a
serious threat to the contemporary society" (Art.9), and thus, "it is
vital for the security forces to combat terrorism effectively"
(Art.l5).
The UN Declaration on Measures to
Eliminate International Terrorism adopted at the 49th session of the General
Assembly, underlines the concern by the international community at the growing
and dangerous links between terrorists groups, drug traffickers and their
paramilitary gangs which have resorted to all types of violence, thus
endangering the constitutional order of States and violating basic human rights.
This Declaration also emphasizes the desirability of closer cooperation and
coordination among States in combating crimes closely connected with terrorism,
including drug trafficking, unlawful arms trade, money laundering and smuggling
of nuclear and other potentially deadly materials.
PKK's Involvement in Drug
Trafficking
The 1992 annual report of the
United States Department of State Bureau of International Narcotics and Law
Enforcement, entitled "The International Narcotics Control Strategy" (INCS)
proposes that the European drug cartel is controlled by PKK members. Likewise,
the 1996 INCS report underlines the fact that the terrorist PKK uses heroin
production and trafficking to support its acts of terror. The 1998 report,
pointing to persistent reports of PKK's involvement in narcotics trafficking
through Turkey, reiterates that the PKK not only uses "taxes" extracted from
narcotics traffickers and refiners to finance its operations, but "may be
more directly involved in transporting and marketing narcotics in
Europe" as well.
A 1995 report prepared by the Drug
Enforcement Agency of the US Department of Justice emphasizes that the PKK is
engaged in drug trafficking and money laundering activities and is
well-established in the production of almost all kinds of opium products and
their smuggling. The revenues from these activities, the report continues, are
used for purchasing firearms, munitions and other equipment used by the
terrorists. The report cites other sources of revenue of the PKK as extortion,
robbery and counterfeiting. In "Political Violence and
Narco-Trafficking", a booklet published by the Paris Institute of
Criminology in October 1996, PKK's narcotics network and its functioning are
detailed; the amount of narcotics captured by the European security forces are
quoted; and the
PKK's role in drug trafficking is
thus documented.
The involvement of the PKK in all
stages of drug trafficking has been further documented in a conference held by
Dr. François Haut of the Paris Institute of Criminology in Brussels on 25 April
1997. It is stated that the PKK is engaged in producing, refining and marketing
of drugs and has contacts in numerous countries. The PKK's "turnover" from drug
trafficking is estimated at "millions of US dollars". Dr. Haut notes that the
problem of narcotics trafficking has entered the Parisian suburbs thanks to the
PKK, which he thinks is responsible for 10 to 80 percent of the heroin smuggled
to Paris. Similarly, a 1996 report prepared by Jean Claude Salomon, François
Haut and Jean-Luc Vannier for the Paris Institute of Criminology, utilizing such
reliable and impartial sources as the Interpol, British NCIS and the national
police agencies of the EU member states, notes that the narcotics route that
runs through Turkey to the Balkans and western Europe benefits the "separatist"
organizations of Turkish/Kurdish origin and the PKK militants and their
intermediaries.
The March 1997 issue of "The
Geopolitical Drug Dispatch," a monthly report prepared by the "
Observatoire Geopolitique Des Drogues" points to the role of the PKK in
the smuggling of drugs through the "Balkan route" and emphasizes that the
terrorist organization has started using Romania and Moldavia, positioned along
this route, as its rearward bases. The report also states that the Turkish
traffickers arrested in these countries are of Kurdish origin and thus that many
criminal activities attributed to Turkish individuals or groups "are in fact
carried on by Kurds, usually with links to the Kurdistan Workers' Party
(PKK)." The report continues to point out that the PKK often hides behind
its umbrella organizations, such as the ERNK and business, youth and women's
associations. To illustrate, it is noted in the report that "the ERNK
business group in Romania, called the Association of Eastern Businessmen,
is an excellent cover for the illicit activities of the PKK which has
tight control over the drug deals as the local PKK leader also heads the
ERNK."
Last but not least, the final
report of the thirty-third session of the Sub-commission on Illicit Drug Traffic
and Related Matters in the Near and Middle East, held under the auspices of the
UN International Drug Control Program (UNDCP) in Beirut from 29
June
to 3 July 1998, noted that
"there were clear linkages between some narco-terrorist organizations, for
example, the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), and other organized transnational
criminal groups."
Turkey's position astride the
"Balkan route" makes it a significant transit point for narcotics. Using this
route, the PKK smuggles morphine base and heroin from Iran, Pakistan and
Afghanistan into Turkey across Turkey's eastern borders. Since the late- 1980s,
the terrorist organization has, instead of trafficking externally-produced
heroin, opted for a more profitable way of producing heroin from non-heroin
opiates. To this end, the PKK refines base morphine into heroin in mobile
laboratories near Istanbul and in the southeastern parts of Anatolia. The PKK
also cultivates opium and cannabis in the Beka valley (Lebanon) and in the
isolated regions of southeastern Anatolia and northern Iraq.
Narcotics smuggling therefore
constitutes a major part of the PKK's financial apparatus, alongside extortion,
blackmailing, robbery, arms smuggling and illicit labor trafficking. The PKK is
actively involved in all phases of narcotics trafficking, from the producing and
processing of the drugs to their smuggling and marketing. The revenues gained
from illicit drug dealings and marketing are channeled to funding its arms
purchases, which is required to sustain its terrorist
activities.
PKK's involvement in narcotics
trafficking is thus now well-documented. Below there are some further examples
compiled from the reports of the foreign media and foreign or Turkish security
authorities which conclusively indicate PKK's role in drug
trafficking.
Foreign Press
Reports
In January 1992, the Bremen Police
arrested a "Kurd" selling drugs. The police found a bunch of keys in his pocket,
which belonged to an apartment where "Kurds" lived. Hanging on the walls of the
said apartment were posters of the PKK and its leader
Abdullah Öcalan. The police also
found some clues suggesting that the PKK finances its armed struggle by the
heroin trade (SAT-1 TV, 24 Hours, 6 January 1992).
In 1992, a total number of 2,069
drug addicts died in Germany. In the same year, the German police apprehended
some children aged 10-12, coming from southeastern Turkey and selling drugs in
Hamburg. A child of 8 carrying a firearm was also arrested. All these children
confessed that the PKK was using them to sell drugs, since they did not have
penal responsibility. The police seized 30 kg. of heroin from a "Kurd" who was
said to have transferred DM 150,000 to his partners. The estimated figure the
PKK earns from the narcotics trade is more than 56 million DM (VOX TV ; Germany,
12 February 1993).
In 1993, more than 50 PKK members
were arrested by the Essen Police of Germany. The Federal Criminal Department in
Wiesbaden found out that the PKK was organizing drug trafficking in Germany and
the narcotics trade in Hamburg, Bremen, Frankfurt and Essen was under the
control of the PKK (German Daily "NRZ," 30 March 1993). The Hamburg Criminal
Police arrested a band of Kurdish drug smugglers on 15 September 1993.
11-year-old children, who were also arrested with the other members of the band,
later confessed to the police that the PKK illegally brought them from Turkey to
Germany in order to make them sell drugs for the organization (Hamburg Local TV
Broadcast, 15 September 1993).
Three years of intensive police
investigation by the Slagelse Police and the Narcotics Section of the National
Police Force in Denmark resulted in the solution of several armed robberies
whose spoils were used to finance narcotics purchases. The police captured a
Danish person, who had links with two Turkish narcotics kingpins living in
Denmark. During the trial the close relationship between these people and the
PKK was proven. The superintendent Niels Bech of the National Police Force
expressed that large parts of the profits from the narcotics sales in Denmark
have returned to Turkey. In one case DDK 140,000 were sent to Turkey and kilos
of heroin was sent to Europe in return (Danish Daily, "Berlingske Tidende," 31
October 1993).
Two young PKK members (aged 14 and
16) were caught by the police selling drugs at the Trabrennbahn Train Station
near Wandsbeck on 26 September 1994 ("Bild-Hamburg" 28 September
1994).
On 5-6 October 1994 the "Bild"
reported that narcotics were being distributed from Jork in Alten Land to
Northern Germany and that the Kurdish dealers transferred 15 million DM to their
collaborators in Turkey.
On 24 October 1994 the German
magazine "Focus" wrote that in the last 9 years 315 PKK members were involved in
drug trafficking around Europe, 154 of whom were captured in
Germany.
Ralf Brottscheller, the Senator of
Interior of Bremen, accused the PKK of extortion and organized narcotics
smuggling ("Focus," 18 September 1995). In France, the Aulnay Sous Bois Public
Security Units and Paris Bureau of Combating Narcotics Trafficking conducted an
operation which was completed after long and careful preparations of 18 months.
30 people involved in narcotics trafficking on behalf of the PKK and the Mafia
active in France and Belgium were taken into custody after the operation (French
Press, 4 November 1996).
The Belgian Gendarmerie raided a
camp in Zutendaal/Genk, in which the PKK militants were being trained, and
apprehended 35 people, including children and some internationally wanted
criminals ("Arnhemse Courant," 22 November 1996). The administrators of a facade
company helping the PKK's activities in France were taken into custody in Paris
(French Press, 25 February 1997).
The "Observatoire Geopolitique Des
Drogues" noted in its monthly report that the biggest heroin seizure in Hungary
to date was made on December 12, 1996, aboard a Turkish bus belonging to the
Toros Line company. The Turkish traffickers, caught with 42 kg. heroin turned
out to be "Kurds." The report mentions the case of a Romanian citizen who, upon
his arrest with 2 kg. heroin by the Turkish police in Edirne in September 1995,
admitted that he was running for the PKK drugs in one direction and explosives
in the other.
The report also notes that 65
percent of the drugs confiscated by the Romanian customs officers are found on
passenger vehicles and that "every time Romanian police make a drug haul at a
Turkish company, Kurds are involved" ("The Geopolitical Drug Dispatch", No. 65,
March 1997).
A high level member of the PKK,
known as the PKK chief in the Hannover area, was arrested in Berlin. He had been
wanted by the German police on charges of arson attacks, and damage to private
property. The police found out evidence regarding the PKK's involvement in
illicit labor trafficking ("Berliner Zeitung" 4 April 1997). 20 refugees were
arrested in a police raid on a refugee hostel which was discovered to be a PKK
base, in Grimma, Bahren. The operation was conducted jointly by the German
police and experts from the Federal Criminal Department. The police confiscated
various fire arms, thousands of DM and receipts. These immigrants were actively
involved in the activities of the PKK and its facade branches (German Press, 4
April 1997). The Bavarian police conducted a series of operations against the
PKK militants in refugee camps, arrested 2, and took into custody 17 of them
(Statement by Straubing Police Directorate dated 17 June 1997).
The PKK transfers people, weapons
and drugs through the FRY (Former Republic of Yugoslavia) and purchases weapons
in return (Croatian daily "Vjesnik" August 1997). The "Focus" magazine remarked
on 23 March 1998 that members of the PKK invested the money laundered from drug
trafficking and extortion in the real estate market in Celle,
Germany.
On August 1, 1998, the Croatian
and Slovenian security forces jointly confiscated 38 kg. of heroin in a vehicle
bound for western Europe. According to the Croatian reports, the shipment of the
heroin was realized by Turkish citizens "who are most probably members of the
PKK" This is consistent with the statements made by Slovenian security forces
who have pointed to a "reasonable suspicion" that a member of the PKK is
involved in the smuggling (Croatian and Slovenian press reviews, 6 August
1998).
Four "Kurdish" people were
captured with 2.6 kg. heroin, the largest amount of narcotics ever captured in
west Norway. It is thought that the four people caught were merely couriers and
that the trafficking was carried out by a "Turkish/Kurdish" network (Bergen, 7
August 1998).
"…The PKK has financed its war
against Turkey by extortion and the sale of heroin, and according to British
security service sources it is responsible for 40 percent of the heroin sold in
the European Union…" (British weekly magazine "The Spectator", 28 November-5
December 1998 issue).
Reports of Foreign Police and
Foreign Officials
In January 1990, a PKK member was
arrested in Switzerland for selling drugs on behalf of the PKK. In the same
month a 13-year-old person, also linked to the PKK, was captured in the
Netherlands and was released as being too young to prosecute. A Turkish citizen
of Kurdish origin, apprehended in France on 22 January 1991, confessed that he
had been trading drugs in France on behalf of the PKK and that the drugs were
transported by trucks or sometimes by tourist vehicles and then distributed to
different cities not only in France but in various other countries in Europe as
well. After being arrested on 7 March 1991 in France, a "Kurdish" person
confessed that the drugs he was selling belonged to the PKK.
Another Turkish citizen of
"Kurdish" descent, captured with 48 kg. of heroin in Arnheim in November 1991,
was found out to be a PKK member. The German Police reports underline the fact
that l,103 kg. of heroin was seized by the police in 1991 and 400 of 735
suspects involved in the drug trading incidents were PKK members. This ratio
mounted to 450/735 in 1992 and 300/457 in 1993.
The US Department of State Bureau
of International Narcotics Matters expressed in its International Narcotics
Control Strategy Report (1992) that the two-thirds of the people involved in
drug trafficking incidents in Europe are PKK-oriented.
An active PKK member working as a
truck driver, who was known to have stood as a candidate in Bonn in the 1992
elections for the PKK's so-called National Assembly, was seized in Troisdorf,
Germany, while transporting substantial amounts of drugs.
In 1993, the police seized 200 kg.
of heroin in London. Further investigation revealed that the drug traders were
working for the PKK. A police operation in Offenbach, Germany on 7 January 1993,
led to the seizure of 5 kilos of heroin. Among the seven people captured by the
police was a person known as the "PKK's accountant."
As a consequence of the operations
conducted by the German police in Hamburg, Bremen and Bad Bramstad during
May-October 1993, 15.7 kg. of heroin was confiscated and 22 people were
apprehended, including PKK members and supporters. The criminals turned out to
have requested political asylum from the German authorities. 15 Turkish citizens
with "Kurdish" descent were arrested in connection with 1.6 kg. heroin seized by
the German police in Recklinghausen, Germany, on 27 October 1993. Among those
were the participants at pro-PKK demonstrations in Turkey. A message by the
German Interpol dated October 26, 1993, pointed out that six Turkish citizens
with Kurdish origin were arrested on charges of laundering the proceeds from
drug trafficking in the Netherlands, Spain, Italy and Germany. Large sums of
cash, thought to be laundered money, were captured by the German
police.
Another Turkish citizen of
"Kurdish" origin, captured in Caracas, Venezuela on 10 November 1993, while
carrying 3.5 kg. of cocaine, confessed that she was a PKK
courier.
This incident is said to prove the
links of the PKK with the drug cartels even in Latin America.
The NCIS estimated that the 44
percent of 1993 budget of the PKK as 430 million French Francs, came from
illicit drug trafficking.
During a six-week campaign
initiated by the Stuttgart city police in January 1994, 76 people were
apprehended, including some who had been formerly prosecuted in Turkey because
of their links with the terrorist organization.
On 17 August 1994 the German
Criminal Authority informed the Turkish Security Authorities that a political
refugee, resident in Kiel, was engaged in drug trade and money transfer to the
PKK.
The US Deputy Secretary of State
in charge of narcotics, Ambassador Robert Felbard, answering a question at a
press briefing in February 1994 regarding the PKK supervision of drug
trafficking in Europe and the United States, stated that the US had quite a bit
of information about the PKK's involvement in the trafficking of heroin into
Europe. The Amsterdam police, during an anti-drug
operation on 11 December 1994, seized numerous firearms, machine guns, bombs and
PKK documents and arrested several PKK militants.
The Bavarian Minister of Interior,
Günter Beckstein, referring to the 30 PKK militants captured in Europe during
the last two years, stated that the PKK has taken control of the European
narcotics market (Turkish daily, "Cumhuriyet," 31 July 1995). The Director of
German Terrorism Research Forum, Rolp Tophoven, has stated that a large majority
of the people arrested on charges of narcotics smuggling are of "Kurdish"
descent, many of whom confess committing the crime on behalf of the terrorist
PKK (Turkish daily, "Yeni Yüzyıl," 12 November 1995).
Olivier Foll, another expert on
international terrorism, noted that the PKK members, when apprehended for
illegal possession of narcotics, confess to smuggling drugs for the PKK and
exploit the "political" dimension of the issue as an excuse for their crimes.
Mr. Foll criticized the "Kurdish" policies of some European statesmen who grant
concessions to the PKK (Turkish daily "Yeni Yüzyl," 12 November 1995). During
the Sputnik operation of September 18, 1996, the Belgian police seized 350
million Belgian Francs that were thought to have been the proceeds from
narcotics trafficking. Seven people having ties with the PKK were apprehended in
connection with the crime. The Sputnik operation also revealed that the MED-TV,
the mouthpiece of the PKK, is involved in PKK's money laundering activities. The
MED-TV representative in Germany was taken into custody as he was unable to
explain the source of the 500 million BF, used in financing the station. It was
later found that he was using revenues from drug trafficking for financing not
only the MED-TV but also the so-called "Kurdistan Parliament in Exile" (KPE).
The Belgian police seized many firearms in the KPE building they
searched.
In August 1997, the German police
conducted a comprehensive operation against the PKK members in Cologne in which
six members of the PKK were arrested. After the operation, Cologne police
officers issued a statement emphsizing the fact that the PKK is involved in
organized crime including extortion in Germany to finance its acts of
terrorism.
The Göttingen police of Germany,
after a 14-month investigation, managed to penetrate the drug smuggling network
with two "Kurdish" informers in May 1998 and found out that the revenues from 40
kg. of heroin marketed were channeled to the PKK.
The KDP (The Kurdistan Democratic
Party of Masud Barzani) forces discovered extensive narcotics farms in the Gali
Pes Agha region of northern Iraq, captured from the PKK in May
1997.
Turkish Police
Reports
A PKK member, captured by the
police with 14.5 kg. of heroin on 1 September 1993, confessed that he was acting
on behalf of the PKK abroad, and that he was a drugsmuggler, transferring 30
percent of the proceeds to the terrorist organization. Following the
confiscation of 20.3 kg. of heroin in Duisburg, Germany, two PKK supporters were
arrested by the German police. This triggered a police investigation in Turkey,
which led to the seizure of firearms and munitions in a vehicle owned by the
same family in the city of Mersin on 12 May 1993.
A PKK militant of Iranian origin
confessed that the terrorist organization has drug production facilities in Iran
and that Osman Öcalan (the brother of Abdullah Öcalan and a leading figure of
the terrorist organization PKK) is in charge of the production of narcotics
which are later marketed mainly in Europe to raise money for the organization.
Two PKK militants, arrested with 30 kg. of heroin, expressed that they were
aiming to sell the drugs to provide financial contributions to the PKK. The
Turkish Security Forces seized 120 kg. of heroin and 40 kg. of hemp seeds
(cannabis) in a PKK shelter in southeastern Turkey.
One PKK member, who was put in
jail on 3 July 1993 for getting involved in the terrorist acts of the PKK in
Hakkari and released on 20 October 1993, was captured with 36 kg. of heroine,
140 kg. of precursors and some other drug-producing material. Another member of
the PKK, sentenced to 6 years of imprisonment, confessed that he was in charge
of establishing the links between the drug smugglers and the terrorist
organization.
During the operations conducted by
the Turkish security forces, two people, captured with 48 kg. of hashish, were
arrested as they were found out to be involved in narcotrade so as to provide
financial support to the PKK.
Another Turkish citizen said to be
of "Kurdish-origin", caught by the police in possession of 117 kilos of hashish
in Istanbul, was later found to have participated in the PKK-led attack on the
Turkish Consulate General in Frankfurt on March 1l, 1992.
One Turkish citizen of
"Kurdish-origin" apprehended in July 1994 confessed that he was involved in drug
trafficking to raise money for the PKK. The police, making use of the
information he disclosed, were able to arrest some other members of the
terrorist organization.
On 1 August 1994 a PKK member,
apprehended in Diyarbakr with 2 kg. of heroin, acknowledged that he was selling
drugs for the PKK. He also informed the police that some PKK members were
cultivating drugs and gave the names of the places where hemp seeds (cannabis)
were grown. In further investigation the police captured 120,000 roots of hemp
seeds in a village named Dibek. On 21 August 1994 the Turkish security forces
apprehended two people with 150 kg. of hashish and considerable amounts of hemp
seeds and hashish growing material. The security forces also captured PKK
documents and propaganda material and two machine guns.
Diyarbakır Police, conducting an
operation against the PKK on 17 July 1994, apprehended three people with 80 kg.
of hashish, PKK documents, a gun and three ERNK seals. These people confessed
that the PKK ordered them to sell the drugs and purchase firearms and food
supplies for the organization. The said people turned out to have participated
in various terror acts such as the rocket attack to and storming of a police
residence in Lice on 29 June, the bomb attack on the residence of a judge in
Diyarbakır on 16 January 1994, and a bomb attack on a police patrol
car.
Seven people captured in the city
of Cizre on 23 March 1994 with 398.5 kilos of heroin confessed to smuggling
narcotics on behalf of the PKK.
The security forces have had
strong evidence suggesting that a network composed of PKK militants is involved
in drug trading in Zaho, northern Iraq. The network is known to hand the drugs
over to clients either in Zaho or in Turkey. Therefore, it was not very
surprising that during the operation by the Turkish Armed Forces in northern
Iraq against the PKK, the Turkish army discovered a large farm where the
terrorists cultivated hemp (cannabis). The farm was located near the PKK's
Pirvela Camp in the Bahara valley. The Turkish military officers announced that
the amount of drugs captured during the operation in northern Iraq reached 4.5
tons.
In a raid on 7 March 1995 on the
residence of a person, suspected by the police of having contact with the PKK
militants, the Turkish police seized large amounts of drugs, drug precursor
chemicals, firearms and ammunitions.
Three of the seven people caught
with 21.5 kilos of heroin in Hamburg, Germany, have been found out to have been
formerly arrested in Turkey on charges of PKK membership.
The two people caught by the
police with 20.6 kilos of narcotics in zmir on August 5, 1996, have been found
out to be running an association linked to the PKK in the
Netherlands.
Another PKK sympathizer, who was
captured with acetic anhydride, a heroin precursor chemical, by the Turkish
security forces in the city of Van on March 24, 1998, was found to have been
previously arrested for providing logistic support to the PKK. The Turkish
security forces have strong evidence that the PKK militants, settled in the
Iranian part of our common border, receive commissions from the narcotics
smugglers called "taxes or donations."
The role of the PKK in incidents
given above is undeniable, both because of the documents seized by the security
forces and the backgrounds of the arrested people. Still, in certain Western
countries, the activities of this terrorist organization, are
regrettably being
tolerated.
After the prohibition of PKK in
France and Germany towards the end of 1993, a wave of optimism emerged in
Turkish public opinion that the rest of the European countries would follow suit
by adopting similar measures. This, however, has not happened to date. Yet, it
is clear that the prohibition of the PKK and its front organizations in European
countries would also be in the interest of these countries. The PKK is
responsible for narcotics trafficking, extortion, robbery, and illicit arms and
human smuggling activities, and thus circumvent the rule of law and compromises
the security and stability of the countries in which it operates. It is no
coincidence that drug trafficking cases predominantly occur in those countries
where the organization of the PKK is extensive and tolerated.
Is There A "Kurdish Question" in
Turkey?
As the first melting pot and
encounter point of many different civilizations and cultures, present-day Turkey
contains a multitude of ethnic, religious and cultural elements. Turkey is proud
of its great heritage. This centuries-long shared way of life is
perfectly
second-nature for the people of
Turkey.
Yet, different ethnic identities,
including the Kurdish, are acknowledged and accepted in Turkey. The state does
not categorize its citizens along ethnic lines nor does it impose an ethnic
identity on them. Population censuses in Turkey never count people on the basis
of their ethnic origins. But, this does not prevent an individual citizen to
identify himself or herself in terms of a specific ethnic category. That is a
private affair and ultimately a matter of personal preference. Public
expressions and manifestations of ethnic identity are prohibited neither by law
nor by social custom. Folklore is rich and colorful and local variations,
customs and traditions are protected and supported.
Turkey is a constitutional state
governed by the rule of law. Democracy rests on a parliamentary system of
government, respect for human rights and on the supremacy of law. Multi-party
politics, free elections, a growing tradition of local government mark the
democratic way of life in Turkey.
Constitutional citizenship is one
of the principles upon which the Turkish state was founded. The Turkish
Constitution stipulates that the State and the Nation are indivisible, and that
all citizens irrespective of their ethnic, racial or religious origin, are equal
before the law.
For historical and cultural
reasons, and under stipulations of binding international treaties, the concept
of "minority" applies specifically to certain groups of non-Moslem citizens. In
fact, the social fabric of Turkey is a unique real life case of the OSCE
principle that "not all ethnic, cultural, linguistic or religious differences
necessarily lead to the creation of national minorities". Our citizens of
Kurdish ethnic origin are not discriminated against and they feel themselves to
be equal members of the society. Many have risen to the highest positions in the
Republic. They share the same opportunities and the same destiny as the rest of
the population.
Ethnicity is not a factor in the
political geography of Turkey. That is, the predominant majority of the Turkish
citizens of Kurdish descent live in western Turkey, with the greatest
concentration being in Istanbul. Even in eastern and southeastern Turkey,
the
Turkish citizens of Kurdish ethnic
origin do not constitute a majority. The unitar structure of the State reflects
the equality and togetherness of different geographic regions of
Turkey.
Therefore, it is simply neither
understandable nor acceptable for Turkey to discuss "the respect for social,
economic and legitimate political aspirations of Kurds" as if the Turkish
citizens of Kurdish ethnic descent constitute a different and separate
community. They are citizens of a nation that has been sharing for centuries the
same values with respect to language, religion, culture and patriotic identity,
common history and the will for a mutual future.
It is of cardinal importance to
differentiate between a militant organization, which resorts systematically to
terrorism as well as all kinds of organized crime, and the phenomenon of Kurdish
ethnicity. It is evident that our citizens of Kurdish ethnic origin are
law-abiding people. Most of them live in western Turkey, drawn by economic
attraction. They are of their own choice integrated into the society and its
economic, social and cultural aspects. In Turkey, citizens of all ethnic origins
can rise to the highest political positions and ranks such as cabinet ministers
and members of parliament. Throughout the centuries, much mixing has taken place
through intermarriages. Progress in industrial, cultural and social fields, as
well as urbanization, has also contributed to the voluntary and natural process
of integration.
The population in southeast
Anatolia, like our citizens in other regions of the country, participate fully
in the political life of Turkey; they freely make their voices heard in local
administrations, in the municipalities, the Parliament, and the central
government through elected representatives. It is nothing out of the ordinary
for the individuals of different ethnic origins to participate in the political
life of the country. Even the most militant circles concede the fact that there
are no obstacles to social mobility of individuals from different ethnic origins
to any profession or career, whether public or private.
The fundamental rights and
freedoms of all Turkish citizens are secured by the relevant provisions of the
Constitution. However, those rights have been threatened by the PKK, creating
terror among the populace.
None of our citizens of Kurdish
ethnic origin, notwithstanding allegations to the contrary, who publicly or
politically asserts his/her Kurdish ethnic identity risks harassment or
persecution. However, acts or statements made against the "territorial
integrity" of Turkey are subject to legal prosecution under the law. If these
allegations were true, none of the publications in Kurdish whose contents are
full of assertions of Kurdish ethnic identity would have been tolerated by the
authorities.
In the same vein, Turkey is often
accused of refusing to negotiate with the terrorist organization PKK. These
accusations contradict the fundamental rules of international law. Negotiating
with a terrorist organization, responsible for thousands of murders, would be
tantamount to justifying and encouraging terrorism.
Is the Use of Kurdish Banned in
Turkey ?
Contrary to the allegations of
some biased quarters, there is no restriction on the use of languages in Turkey.
Presently, there are many private radio-TV stations broadcasting and numerous
books and journals published both in Turkish and in various dialects
of
"Kurdish" throughout the country.
It should be mentioned here that "Kurdish" can be hardly depicted as "a single
language" linguistically or socially. Many scholars point out the fact that
there are many different local languages and dialects used in southeastern
Turkey such as Zaza and Kırmanchi which are only as close to each other as
French and English. These local languages and dialects are so dissimilar that
people living in one village cannot even communicate with others from a
neighboring village. As a result, Turkish has become the sole medium of
communication in the region. It is ironic that Turkish is also used in PKK's
militant training camps and in the communication between its headquarters and
terrorists as their common language.
The official language of the
Republic of Turkey is Turkish, but Armenian, Ladino, Greek, the different
dialects of "Kurdish", etc. are spoken freely in daily life. There is only one
official language in the country. However, in this respect Turkey does not
constitute a unique and exceptional case either in Europe or among other
democratic countries.
It should also be underlined that
expressions of ethnic identity such as the use of local languages are viewed as
private domain matters. Thus, they are not the subject of law and are therefore
not regulated by the state. The Turkish language is the language of the Republic
of Turkey and is consequently the only formal language of education and
instruction. The same is true in most democracies. Though it is possible to help
promote them, it is neither realistic nor feasible to make local tongues
official languages of the State.
Socio-Economic Development of
Southeastern Turkey and the Southeastern Anatolia Project (GAP)
The Southeastern Anatolia Project
(GAP), consisting of a complex system of dams, waterworks, irrigation and
hydraulic energy network is a colossal investment of Turkey, the biggest
regional initiative ever attempted in Turkey. It aims at changing the whole
complexion of the arid geography and consequently, the social and economic
backwardness of southeastern Anatolia. The Turkish Government has always
believed that one of the best tools in the struggle against terrorism is
economic development. It is no accident that the region in which the PKK
operates is also the least economically developed part of Turkey. The Turkish
Government is determined to rectify that.
It is a fact that there are
socio-economic regional imbalances in Turkey as in every developing, even some
developed countries. Rough geographic and climatic conditions of southeastern
Turkey are the main factors in this imbalance. Terrorism and economic
backwardness of the region affect all our citizens indiscriminately. Despite
many governmental incentives and low taxation policies, the private sector had
in the past been reluctant to invest in the region, mainly due to security
concerns. Public sector has taken the place of the private sector and many
investments have already been realized by the State. "GAP" is the best example
of that. Government investment in this region is much higher than the amount of
taxes collected there. "GAP" is a gigantic economic step forward which will
change the destiny of the region. Agricultural production of Turkey will rise by
several folds when this project, which is both energy and irrigation oriented,
is completed. Yet, its important impact is not expected only on agricultural
production, but also on industry, construction, services, as well as on the
Gross Regional Product and employment. When the Project is completed, per capita
income will increase three times, and 3.3 million jobs will be created. The
Southeastern Anatolia Project constitutes an integrated project which
contributes significantly to the realization of national targets for the
utilization of development potentials, self-induced economic growth, social
stability and enhancement of export possibilities, and at the same time aims at
the promotion of the principle of sustainable human development; thus, human
development is the core of sustainable development in the "GAP" region. In this
context, the "GAP Social Action Plan" consists of the basic policies, targets,
strategies and implementation measures for ensuring the social development of
the region through a human-centered approach emphasizing sustainability of the
development. This people-centered development aims to remove the gap between the
project area and the more developed regions in Turkey and to promote equitable
development.
This ambitious socio-economic
development drive also explains why the PKK has been targeting civilians as well
as economic and social projects. PKK's aim is both to terrorize the local
population and to keep the region economically and socially backward so as to
recruit more militants into its own ranks. However, this is being reversed as
the GAP began to bear its fruits. For example, although the so-called head of
the PKK is from ?anlurfa, there has never been a terrorist act there, because it
is an economically powerful settlement. The state of emergency still has to
continue in some of the provinces of southeastern Turkey. It is the direct
consequence and explicit proof of the PKK terrorism in the region. It is of
utmost importance for Turkey to augment the allocation of human and financial
resources for the socio-economic development of this region. The precondition to
achieve this task is the eradication of the PKK terrorist organization.
Eradication of terrorism will not only put an end to the deliberate devastation
by terrorists of the underdeveloped regions of Turkey, but also release
important resources for developmental activity in those very regions. While
terrorism might be viewed as a consequence of certain underlying causes, it is
also incontestably true that terrorism is itself the main reason of poverty and
underdevelopment of those areas where it is perpetrated.
In sum, our citizens of all ethnic
origins -Turkish, Kurdish and others- living together for more than ten
centuries in Turkey have created a society of patriotic citizens sharing common
values. They established their own nation-state, the Turkish Republic, following
the War of Independence. Ethnic descent is not considered a cause of
discrimination or privilege just as in all modern nation States on the
globe.
NATIONAL SECURITY OF
TURKEY
HOSGELDINIZ (WELCOME)
Lutfedip,bana ulastiniz,tesekkur
eder,sevgi,saygi ve selamlarimi sunarim.
Bu alan,bana ulasmada istasyon"
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Lutfen sosyal aglarda kisisel
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dikkatli olunuz.
Ozen ve dikkatli olmaniz icin,arzu edilmiyerek sunulan
linklerimiz icin,iletisim bloggerinin sag dikey cubugunda asagiya dogru
baglantilari verilmis tum alanlarimizi,duvarlarimizi gruplara sevk edilen
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derseniz Ozkan Bostanci serefsizi,benzeri,cetesi ve Turkcell izmir teknik servis
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serefsizlere,surtuklere karsi,ozen ve dikkatli olmalari icin dostlariniza
oneriniz.Allah'a emanet olunuz.
Turk olmak;Guzel ahlak,Allah korkusu,kuldan
utanma duygusu,insanca davranislar hanimefendi ve beyefendi olma hali
namus,seref,herseyden ote yuksekmi,yuksek karekter gerektirir.Bu nedenle Ataturk
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