Kurds are about to be betrayed - again

So, does that humanitarian argument still hold water? I mean, people can ask ‘what about China’, but that can be dismissed as it being a seperate case altogether. But this ties directly into the current operation and it is generally known and accepted that more humanitarian problems will arise in Kurdistan after this conflict rather than being solved…

Kurds are about to be betrayed - again

A middle-aged Kurd took me on a lonely hillside near here to point out the isolated police station in whose basement he had been beaten, subjected to electric shocks and sexually humiliated. We stood half a mile away as he recounted his tale, and then the police spotted us - and a tank rushed toward us.

I fled. But the Kurds in Turkey cannot flee, and many here worry that the war in Iraq will set off more of the savagery that marked the 1980s and 1990s in “Turkish Kurdistan” - a phrase that, if I were Turkish, might lead to my arrest. The world has turned its back on the Kurds more times than I can count, and there are signs that America is planning to betray them again.

The United States was so desperate to bribe Turkey into its coalition that it was willing to allow tens of thousands of Turkish troops into Iraq’s Kurdish areas. And Washington still seems ready to acquiesce in this.

The Turks, having broken the back of Kurdish resistance within their borders, plan to expand their efforts and “disarm” Iraq’s Kurds to block their control of oil fields. How can America allow this? Aside from the sheer immorality of presiding over what is in effect a Turkish invasion of peaceful Iraqi Kurdistan, such an incursion risks warfare between Kurds and Turks that could spill into Turkey as well.

“The Turkish government has been far worse to the Kurds than Saddam has,” one well-educated Kurd said bitterly. His comment stunned me, for Turkey never used poison gas or conducted mass executions as Saddam did, but one Kurd after another said the same thing. They described past Turkish military techniques like raping wives in front of husbands, or assembling villagers to watch men being tied and dragged to their death behind tanks, and they noted that Turkey had been less tolerant of Kurdish language and culture than Saddam.

President George W. Bush is motivated to invade Iraq partly, I believe, by a deeply felt horror of Saddam’s repression. But if American claims to be acting on behalf of the people of Iraq are to have credibility and moral legitimacy, Washington must try to stop Kurds from being slaughtered not only by its enemies in Baghdad, but also by itsfriends in Ankara. And America should certainly not acquiesce in such steps as a Turkish invasion of northern Iraq, which could trigger a new spiral of clashes and repression in Turkey.

How could a warm and friendly country like Turkey, which has made genuine progress on human rights and deserves a place in the European Union, be so harsh to its Kurds? Turkey’s horror of a flourishing Kurdistan derives from its “Sèvres syndrome,” named for the French city where Western powers tried to dismember Turkey after World War I. Ever since then, Turkey has seen accommodation as a slippery slope toward national disintegration. There had been progress toward reconciliation in recent years, but now the prospect of war in Iraq has revived old suspicions and hatreds.

While Bush has been eager to take note of Iraqi atrocities against the Kurds, the West has never been so outraged by similar Turkish atrocities. More than 30,000 people died during the years of fighting between the Turkish government and the guerrillas of the Kurdistan Workers Party; both sides were brutal, murdering civilians and engaging in torture and terrorism. Turkey also forced at least 500,000 Kurds to leave their villages at gunpoint. Excellent reports on Turkey by Human Rights Watch say that some refugees who have tried to return to their homes recently have been shot by government-armed thugs.

Southeast Turkey still feels like a police state. I traveled to one remote town to interview a Kurdish man who had been beaten by the police in front of neighbors, doused with gasoline and then set on fire - he survived. His family was so terrified to see a foreign reporter and risk another police nightmare that they sent me packing.

Only one Kurdish man was not afraid to be named: Abdurrahim Guler, 37, who has endured repeated bouts of torture and death threats. In one brutal session, he says, the commander called out, “Bring in the stick,” used to rape men. “You can use your stick,” Guler says he shouted back. “I still won’t talk even if you use a minaret!”

Now something even grimmer is bearing down on the brave Kurds: Turkish tanks, like the one that sent me fleeing, but waves of them. I feel sick at the thought that America is about to betray the Kurds, again.

Excerpt from another article:

For some reason I don’t think Kurdistan is an option. This certainly has the potential to out-do the whole Israel v. Palestine deal in terms of bloodiness.

Re: Kurds are about to be betrayed - again

[QUOTE]

"The Turkish government has been far worse to the Kurds than Saddam has," one well-educated Kurd said bitterly. His comment stunned me, for Turkey never used poison gas or conducted mass executions as Saddam did, but one Kurd after another said the same thing. They described past Turkish military techniques like raping wives in front of husbands, or assembling villagers to watch men being tied and dragged to their death behind tanks, and they noted that Turkey had been less tolerant of Kurdish language and culture than Saddam.

Completely lie, very very cheap propaganda war. It is not important for me whether someone who reads such slanders believe or not. But I really get angry while I saw such big lies. British drowe away turks from arab lands in ww1 by cheating arabs by help of Lawrance and new lawrances at the moment try new methods to provoke kurds against turks so that they(british) will settle in north iraq to exploit oil fields. In all laws of iraq there is discrimination against kurds and turks . In which turkish law there is such discrimination? Why can not they express concrete examples that shows turks tyranize kurds? Such examples took place in checenia, karabakh and bosnia not in turkey. Tony blair says "we will not give permission turks to exploit north iraq", no he is lieing turkey will not give permission to england to exploit there. Turkish army is always ready to revenge what british did in ww1 against turks. They divided ummah with rulers to expoit and to establish israel. And now they are trying to divide again and to get kurds enemy to arabs, persians and turks.

Turkish army is riping woman kurd women in front husbands?????? this repellent things only belong western armies. Usa army wants diyarbakýr mayor (they plan to use diyarbakir as base in iraq war, this city is in turkey) to establish a brothel for usa armies!!!! they are such unhonourable and pervent army, but they slander honourable turkish army whose members even do not look at a face of girl to preserve discipline and not to disturb them. Riping is the biggest crime in turkish culture. Turkish army did not even ripe their biggest enemy (greeks) in cyprus war, how can they do this repellent things to their citizens (kurds)? turkish army is composed of all turkey citizens turk, arab, kurd, bosnian ...and they are not repulsive like british and usa army.

this news sources from NICHOLAS. Is not it a greek name? In previous gulf war, 500 000 kurds migrated turkey to from north iraq, they were all ill and poor. There happened campaigns even in all cities and villages), we turks share our breads and homes with those imigrants since they were our muslim brothers and sisters, how can such a western whose nation will bomb iraq again can accuse turks of doing bad things to kurds. After reading such comments, my and all other turks are losing their patiences. And we have one different property from british and usa citizens, we go war as if we are going to marriage ceremony but they never can have such brave in wars, so I do not think they can do anything to turkish army in north iraq.....