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TurkeyKurdish Separatists
The Kurdish national movement dates back at least to 1925, when Atatürk
ruthlessly suppressed a revolt against the new Turkish republic motivated by the
regime's renunciation of Muslim religious practices. Uprisings in the 1930s and
1940s prompted by opposition to the modernizing and centralizing reforms of the
Turkish government in Ankara also were put down by the Turkish army. Kurdish
opposition to the government's emphasis on linguistic homogeneity was spurred in
the 1960s and 1970s by agitation in neighboring Iran and Iraq on behalf of an
autonomous Kurdistan, to include Kurds from Turkey, Iran, Iraq, and Syria. The
majority of Kurds, however, continued to participate in Turkish political
parties and to assimilate into Turkish society.
The best known and most radical of the Kurdish movements, the PKK, which
does not represent the majority of Kurds, seeks to establish an independent
Marxist state in southeastern Turkey where the Kurdish population predominates.
Beginning in 1984, a r esurgence of Kurdish attacks attributed to the PKK
necessitated the deployment of Turkish army units and elite police forces.
Fighting in the mountain terrain favored the insurgents, who could intimidate
local Kurdish families and ambush regular troops. T he violence has mounted
since 1991, with PKK guerrillas from camps in Syria, Iran, and Iraq, as well as
from inside Turkey itself, attacking Turkish military and police outposts and
targeting civilian community leaders and teachers. In 1993 PKK gunmen sou ght
military targets outside the southeastern region; they also conducted
coordinated attacks in many West European cities, particularly in Germany where
more than 1 million Kurds live, against Turkish diplomatic installations and
Turkish businesses, ofte n operated by Kurds. Such attacks on commercial firms
can be seen as efforts at intimidation to gain contributions to PKK fundraising.
Increased numbers of security forces were mobilized in 1994 against the
Kurds in a government campaign of mounting intensity. One government strategy
has been the forced evacuation and in a number of instances burning some 850
Kurdish villages to prev ent them from harboring PKK insurgents. Although
militarily successful, the evacuations have caused great hardship to the
villagers.
The government has been accused of harassment, destruction of villages, and
the slaying of Kurds believed to be sympathetic to the PKK. Its tactics have
resulted in hundreds of civilian casualties and turned thousands into refugees,
who have crowded i nto major Turkish cities. The insurgents, in turn, have
targeted villages known to be sympathetic to the government, murdering state
officials, teachers, government collaborators, and paramilitary village guards.
In an especially cruel incident in May 199 3 that ended a two-month cease-fire
announced by the PKK, a PKK unit executed thirty unarmed military recruits after
ambushing several buses.
As of early 1994, about 160,000 Turkish troops and gendarmerie had been
mobilized for operations against the PKK. Some 40,000 civilians formed a village
guard of progovernment Kurds. A new mobile security force of about 10,000 troops
was undergoing sp ecial training in antiguerrilla operations. The United States
Department of State estimated that there were 10,000 to 15,000 full-time PKK
guerrillas, 5,000 to 6,000 of whom were in Turkey and the others in Iran, Iraq,
and Syria. There were thought to be an additional 60,000 to 75,000 part-time
guerrillas.
The number of deaths since the war's outbreak in 1984 had risen beyond
12,000 by 1994. According to official figures, more than 1,500 PKK guerrillas
were killed and 7,600 captured during the first eleven months of 1993. During
the same period, the num ber of government security personnel killed came to
676. Civilian deaths totaled 1,249, more than double the 1992 total.
The PKK cause was not helped by the Kurds of Iraq, who depended on Turkey to
keep their enclave protected from the forces of Iraqi president Saddam Husayn.
In October 1992, Iraqi Kurds and the Turkish army carried out a joint offensive
against PKK bas es in Iraqi Kurdistan, forcing the surrender of more than 1,000
PKK fighters. Turkey also enlisted Syria's cooperation in closing the PKK base
in the Bekaa Valley of Lebanon. The government's flexibility in seeking a
negotiated solution to the conflict wa s limited by the growing anger of the
Turkish public over PKK terrorism and the killing of troops in the southeast and
by the military's uncompromising anti-Kurdish stance.
Terrorism of the Left
Marxists and other groups of the extreme left have never been more than
marginal factors in national politics, even during those periods when they were
permitted to function as legal parties. Just before the military crackdown in
1980, four of the sev en Marxist-oriented parties legally recognized at the time
contested local elections but were able to gather a total of only 1 percent of
the national vote. During the 1970s, the leftist movement turned increasingly to
violence and terrorism; at the same time, left-wing ideologies became popular in
the universities and among alienated and often unemployed urban youth.
In 1987 the leaders of the banned Turkish Workers' Party and of the Turkish
Communist Party returned from exile to form a new Turkish United Communist
Party. Both politicians were arrested and charged under the provision of the
penal code that specifi cally outlawed communist organizations and the
dissemination of Marxist-Leninist theories. After being decriminalized in 1991,
the Turkish United Communist Party was again proscribed after the Constitutional
Court upheld a ban on the grounds that it had v iolated Article 14 of the
constitution, which prohibits "establishing the hegemony of one social class
over another."
The most active of the left-wing terrorist groups is the Revolutionary Left
Party (Devrimçi Sol--Dev Sol). Virulently anti-American and anti-NATO, Dev Sol
was responsible for most of the attacks against United States targets and other
political violen ce during the Persian Gulf War. In one incident, two United
States civilians working for a United States defense contractor were killed. The
Turkish government reacted vigorously, conducting raids against Dev Sol safe
houses and enacting new antiterrorist legislation. Dev Sol is believed to have
several hundred members, including several dozen armed militants. Because of
police raids and internal factionalism, attacks by Dev Sol have been less
numerous since 1991. Sympathizers among the foreign Turkish po pulation in
Western Europe have helped fund the organization; training support is believed
to come from radical Palestinians in Lebanon.
The Turkish Workers' and Peasants' Liberation Army and the Marxist-Leninist
Armed Propaganda Unit committed numerous acts of terrorism in the 1970s and
early 1980s, including bank robberies and bombings of businesses, courts, and
key government office s. Members of the latter group were sentenced in 1984
after convictions for eighty-seven killings, including the murders of five
United States servicemen in 1979. Since 1990, however, the other extremist
groups of the left have been overshadowed by Dev So l.
Data as of January 1995
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