Thursday, September 10, 2015

Turkey pro-Kurdish party warns of 'civil war'

The leader of Turkey's main pro-Kurdish party HDP warned the country was being dragged into a "civil war" after a wave of attacks on its offices by nationalists outraged by Kurdish rebel violence.

Tensions have risen sharply in Turkey in the past few days, as the government presses a major military operation against Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) fighters, and the rebels hit back with daily attacks against the army and police.

On Tuesday night, thousands of demonstrators took to the streets of Ankara and other cities to condemn the increasingly bloody PKK assaults in the east, where two attacks killed 29 soldiers and police between Sunday and Tuesday.

The demonstrators took aim at the pro-Kurdish Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP), whom they accuse of collaborating with the PKK, setting fire to a room in the party's headquarters in Ankara and also setting an office in the southern city of Alanya alight.

Turkish media said 93 people were detained in Istanbul alone over the attacks.

State-backed 'lynching'

HDP leader Selahattin Demirtas denounced what he described as two nights of government-backed "lynching" of the party.

"We are facing a campaign of lynching," he said, laying the blame at the feet of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu.

"It is not us (the HDP) who has taken the decision to start this war and intensify it... the decision has been taken by the president and the prime minister," he said in televised comments.

"They want to create a civil war and the last two days have been rehearsals for this," he said.

Addressing a press conference in Ankara with visiting European Union president Donald Tusk, Erdogan hit back, saying Demirtas was "mad" to talk of civil war and warning: "If you side with terrorism you will have to suffer the consequences."

HDP leaders had to "choose between democracy and terrorism", Erdogan said.

Shortly afterwards, the prosecutor's office in the southeastern city of Diyarbakir announced it had launched a case against Demirtas for "insulting the president", "condoning a terrorist organisation" and "inciting crime".

The prosecutors would seek to have Demirtas stripped of his parliamentary immunity, the office said.

Demirtas said the party had suffered over 400 attacks on its property.

Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu denounced the attacks, as well as an attack on Tuesday on the offices of Hurriyet newspaper in Istanbul, which Erdogan supporters accuse of misrepresenting the president.

"The objective of terrorism is to undermine our unshakeable, brotherly ties. Attacking the press and the property of political parties is unacceptable," the premier wrote on Twitter.

  aljazeera.com
10/9/15
--
-
Related:

 

1 comment:

  1. Turkey Kurds: 30 dead in Cizre violence as MPs' march blocked...

    At least 30 people have died in clashes in the Turkish city of Cizre since a military operation began there last week, Turkey's interior ministry says.

    The ministry says most of the dead were Kurdish militants but the pro-Kurdish Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP) says 20 civilians were killed in the violence.

    Locals say Cizre has been "under siege" since the military imposed a curfew.

    On Thursday police stopped a delegation of HDP leaders who were trying to reach the south-eastern city on foot.

    The group includes the party's leader Selahattin Demirtas and 30 members of parliament, who say they want to draw attention to what is happening in the mainly Kurdish area.

    They were intercepted by police near Idil, 28km (17 miles) from Cizre.....BBC

    ReplyDelete

Only News

Featured Post

US Democratic congresswoman : There is no difference between 'moderate' rebels and al-Qaeda or the ISIS

United States Congresswoman and Democratic Party member Tulsi Gabbard on Wednesday revealed that she held a meeting with Syrian Presiden...

Blog Widget by LinkWithin