Wednesday, September 20, 2006 
TURKEY AT CROSSROADS AS SEPARATIST VIOLENCE RISES 
Nicolas Birch 9/14/06 
http://www.eurasian
<http://www.eurasianet.org/departments/insight/articles/eav091406b.shtm>
et.org/departments/insight/articles/eav091406b.shtm
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The death toll in a suspected Kurdish separatist bomb attack in 
southeastern Turkey rose to 10 on September 13, the culmination of a 
month of bloody violence that has pushed tensions in Turkey to the 
boiling point.

Seven children were among those who died when an explosion ripped 
through a bus stop in the mainly Kurdish city of Diyarbakir on the 
night of September 12. The blast occurred hours after Turkey's 
largest civilian Kurdish grouping made an unprecedented call for the 
separatist Kurdistan Workers Party, or PKK, to lay down its weapons 
immediately. 

"This was a provocation aimed at taking us back to the darkest days," 
said Diyarbakir Mayor Osman Baydemir, whose Democratic Society Party 
is seen by many Turks as the PKK's political wing. 

Baydemir has good reason for concern. Two hundred and fifty soldiers 
have died -- 27 in the last month alone -- since the PKK broke its 
unilateral ceasefire two years ago. Every death hardens the attitudes 
of the Turkish public. 

In response, the government has replaced last year's groundbreaking 
talk of a democratic solution to the Kurdish problem with ever more 
frequent calls for military action against PKK units in northern 
Iraq. 

The blast preceded the September 13 arrival of US Special Envoy 
General Joseph W. Ralston (Ret), who is visiting Ankara to discuss 
Turkey's fight against the PKK with Prime Minister Recep Tayyip 
Erdogan, Chief of Staff General Yasar Buyukanit and senior security 
and foreign ministry officials.

Turkey's traditionally tight-knit society shows growing signs of 
division in response to the PKK's renewed activity. Four migrant 
seasonal workers narrowly escaped a lynching in western Turkey last 
week after locals heard them speaking Kurdish and assumed they were 
PKK members. They were the latest victims of deepening paranoia.

The violence has also triggered unprecedented open criticism of the 
Turkish state's handling of its 25-year war on the PKK by relatives 
of the dead. 

"I will not say 'long live this country, '"said Neriman Okay, the 
mother of an army lieutenant killed in action on September 1, as she 
stood over her son's coffin, news outlets reported. "I didn't bring 
my son up to be a soldier, and I do not accept his death. He died for 
nothing." 

In many places, what Okay called her "rebellion" would barely raise 
an eyebrow. In Turkey, it has been front page news for over a week.

"Neriman Okay has given a voice to all mothers whose sons have yet to 
do their military service, even those whose sons are still small 
children," wrote Meral Tamer in the centrist daily Milliyet.

Much of the media coverage has tended to see Okay's words as a 
protest against the government. That tendency has grown since Prime 
Minister Erdogan responded to criticisms of soldiers' deaths by 
announcing that "military service is not a place where you just take 
it easy." 

In a country with an 800,000-strong conscript army, some observers 
think the comment could spell the beginning of the end for Prime 
Minister Erdogan's government. Yet, while Neriman Okay did target the 
premier, her criticisms went much further.

"Sending boys who have never shot a gun to fight terrorists who've 
been in the mountains for 20 years is pure stupidity," she told one 
newspaper after the funeral, describing her son's inadequate 
training. "This should be a job for professionals."

Turkey's new Chief of Staff General Yasar Buyukanit responded by 
saying he respected "anything the mothers of martyrs have to say." 
But analysts point out that his very first announcement on taking up 
his post last month was to insist that there would be no change to 
the system of military service.

Authorities have traditionally treated critics of military policies 
swiftly and harshly. A textbook read by all Turkish students suggests 
that a man who has not done his military service "cannot be useful to 
himself, his family, or his homeland." It's a point of view backed by 
Turkish law, as novelist Perihan Magden discovered this July. Her 
article defending conscientious objection earned charges of "turning 
Turks against the military." She faced three years in jail, but was 
acquitted.

Bringing Neriman Okay, a martyr's mother, before a Turkish court 
would clearly be impossible. But a campaign in one of Turkey's widest-
read dailies in recent days suggests that some are determined to 
neutralize the effect of her protest.

"Beware of the trap" screamed the headlines in nationalist Hurriyet 
on September 11, over a photo of the weeping Neriman Okay. The paper 
went on to report on how the PKK had offered her its condolences as 
part of a plan "to break the moral link connecting the army to the 
Turkish people." Two days later, the paper followed up with an 
interview with General Buyukanit, who thanked the journalist 
responsible for the original story for "laying out this most 
insidious of plans for the Turkish people to see." 

"For the first time, almost, the government and the army are scared," 
commented Eyup Can, editor of the business daily Referans. "You can't 
wage a war if you've lost the support of ordinary people." 

Editor's Note: Nicolas Birch specializes in Turkey, Iran and the 
Middle East. 


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