- cross-posted to:
- globalnews@lemmy.zip
- cross-posted to:
- globalnews@lemmy.zip
Ocalan called on the group he founded to lay down its arms and disband.
“All groups must lay down their arms and the PKK must dissolve itself,” he said. Ocalan’s call for “all groups” indicates that he likely means all PKK offshoots in Syria and Iran.
Since 2012, Syrian Kurds have been able to carve out a semi-autonomous region in northeast Syria, which they refer to as Rojava, meaning Western Kurdistan.
Turkey has repeatedly targeted the region, saying the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), the official military wing of Rojava, is an offshoot of the PKK, an armed group that has been fighting the Turkish state since 1984. The SDF denies links to the PKK.
“there will be no need for weapons if attacks against the Kurds come to an end.”
“SDF officials interviewed by RIC say paths such as simply laying down their weapons are impossible due to the current threats facing northeast Syria - primarily attacks from Turkey and the Turkish-backed SNA.”
“Ocalan’s message concerns the PKK and has nothing to do with us in Syria.”
“there will be no justification for Turkey’s attacks on us in Syria”.
Local Kurdish media reports that attacks by Turkish-backed groups have so far not stopped, with shelling targeting the countryside surrounding the Kurdish-majority city of Kobani.
There is weird politicking and bizarre bedfellows happening in Turkish politics right now. Erdogan’s allies to his right are advocating for Ocalan’s release as some sort of diplomatic manuever. Ocalan’s own nephew I believe has made it into parliament as a relatively outspoken Kurd, and I imagine he is doing the same for more personal reasons.
Meanwhile Ocalan has been pumping out some of the most excitingly radical and revolutionary libertarian socialist ideological literary material in the world in our lifetimes from solitary confinement (Yes it’s torture) over the past 15 years, springboarding off the ideas of Murray Bookchin and instructing the PKK to abandon Marxism in favor of Democratic Confederalism, which they mostly appear to have done despite Kurdish culture’s continued cult of personality around him. I can’t help but wonder if this is a test: Turkey wants him to say one thing publicly, and he’s hedging his bets that his comrades will know to not listen.
Yes, this is obviously coerced. Nobody who has even skimmed his wikipedia page would ever believe he would want the PKK to just fold.
Thanks for the context. Anywhere I can find those writings :)
freeocalan.org has collected a bunch of them here: ocalanbooks.com