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From: Arm The Spirit [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Saturday, February 26, 2000 11:34 PM
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Subject: "The PKK Is Threatened With A Process Of Decay"


"The PKK Is Threatened With A Process Of Decay"

Interview With PKK Critic Selahattin Celik

Exactly one year ago, on February 16, 1999, PKK chairman Abdullah
Ocalan was kidnapped by the Turkish intelligence agency in Nairobi,
Kenya and taken to the prison island of Imrali. Twelve months later,
the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) held its 7th Party Congress for a
period of three weeks at a secret location in Iran. At this congress,
the party definitively distanced itself from the armed struggle. But
this new line has been controversial, both in Turkey and abroad. One
of the most prominent critics of the PKK's new strategy has been
Selahattin Celik, a Kurdish author and publicist who now lives in
Cologne, Germany. Celik, who was himself a member of the PKK's
Central Committee for many years, was attacked in his home in the
summer of 1999 and warned against making further public criticisms of
the PKK.

Question: Since the imprisonment of Abdullah Ocalan, statements from
the PKK have taken on a new tone. Now the party is even seeking
Turkey's admission into the European Union (EU). How can this drastic
reversal be explained?

Selahattin Celik: The PKK not only led the longest guerrilla struggle
in Kurdish history, one which lasted for more than 15 years. During
that time, it also politicized millions of people. The PKK was
present in all sectors of the society.

Question: You mean, the PKK was like that up until today...

Celik: No, the crisis began as early as the 1990s with the mass
movement of the Kurdish population, which led to uprisings and
strikes against Turkey's policies, and which were forcibly repressed
by the Turkish army. This led to drastic changes in the social
structures in Kurdistan. When the PKK began its struggle, Kurdistan
was primarily an agrarian society. The dirty war waged by the Turkish
military forced many Kurds to migrate to the major cities. The PKK's
fighters themselves were increasingly forced out of Turkish territory
and into South Kurdistan - into Iraqi territory. This resulted in a
situation where a majority of the fallen guerrillas died in clashes
with other Kurdish groups, not in clashes with the Turkish army. The
PKK never found an answer to these ever-changing conditions.

Question: What effects did the collapse of the Socialist Bloc ten
years ago have on the movement?

Celik: After the collapse of the Soviet Union, the USA was the only
world superpower left, and it was not going to allow an independent
Kurdistan to be created. The already weakened Turkish left lost more
ground after 1989, while Turkish chauvinism made great advances. The
alliance with Turkish leftist forces called for in the PKK's party
program began to take second place to tactical alliances with states
like Syria - or Russian nationalists like Vladimir Schirinowski, who
gave Ocalan shelter during his flight to Russia in the fall of 1998.

Question: How much responsibility does Ocalan himself bear for this
situation which you have outlined?

Celik: He has been a charismatic leader for 25 years - the party was,
ever since the beginning, based around him. No decisions could be
made inside the PKK without his consent. The Central Committee was
changed, or completely removed, according to Ocalan's whim. Even the
operations of the Kurdish TV station MED-TV were dependent on Ocalan.
One phone call from him and the entire team of directors was
replaced. So the PKK's ideology became gradually transformed into an
Ocalan ideology. In Kurdish exile communities, there have always been
sufficient numbers of intellectuals and pseudo-intellectuals who
gladly emulated Ocalan's words.

Question: What did that mean after Ocalan's arrest?

Celik: It was very simple. The Turkish military told him, you founded
the PKK, and now you will disband it. There have been no negotiations
between the Turkish state and Ocalan. There have only been orders -
and Ocalan has followed these orders. He said during his trial that
the Kurds had never fought for independence and that armed resistance
had been a mistake from the beginning. The things which the Turkish
General Staff used to say are now coming out of Ocalan's mouth. Of
course that led to a great deal of confusion among the Kurdish people.

Question: But what alternatives were there?

Celik: The PKK could have developed democratic alternatives to
Ocalan, if there had been a free discussion among the Kurdish
intellectuals. Before his arrest, Ocalan often said: "If something
happens to me, then the Kurdish cause is lost." But no precautions
were taken to prevent this from happening. It's a fatal mistake that
Ocalan is still the leader of the PKK, still making decisions, even
though he's in the hands of the enemy. Any other army would have
naturally replaced its commander-in-chief right away and would ignore
the statements coming from Imrali. In fact, the PKK hinted at that at
first when it said: "Ocalan is our chairman, but he is in prison. His
orders are no longer binding." Inexplicably, however, they then
reversed this position. Its seems the leadership is afraid to take on
its responsibilities.

Question: Several PKK prisoners have distanced themselves from the
new line, entire guerrilla units are refusing to demobilize. What
chances does a PKK opposition have?

Celik: The new line of the PKK is being supported by NATO, the
Kurdish party HADEP, and a large segment of the Kurdish population
who are tired of war. Others hope that things will now improve. The
opposition to the new line, on the other hand, is a fading minority.
So the PKK opposition will not affect much. Instead, I fear that the
PKK is threatened with a long-term process of decay.

Interview by Peter Nowak.

(Interview published in 'Freitag' #8 - February 18, 2000; Translated
by Arm The Spirit)

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Arm The Spirit is an autonomist/anti-imperialist information
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variety of material, including political prisoners, national
liberation struggles, armed communist resistance, anti-fascism,
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called ATS-L. For more information, contact:

Arm The Spirit
P.O. Box 6326, Stn. A
Toronto, Ontario
M5W 1P7 Canada

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