‘Door’ mystery erupts over PKK hit in Paris

‘Door’ mystery erupts over PKK hit in Paris

PARIS / ANKARA
‘Door’ mystery erupts over PKK hit in Paris

French police secure the access to the entrance of the Information Center of Kurdistan in Paris, where three Kurdish women activist, Sakine Cansız, Fidan Doğan and Leyla Söylemez, were found shot dead. AA photo

Three women, including a co-founder of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), were found dead with gunshot wounds yesterday in central Paris, raising questions about the perpetrators as Turkey and the PKK’s jailed leader launch fresh talks to settle the Kurdish issue.

Sakine Cansız, who helped found the PKK in 1978 and who was said to be close to PKK leader Abdullah Öcalan; Brussels-based Kurdistan National Congress’ (KNK) Paris representative Fidan Doğan and Leyla Söylemez, a Kurdish activist, were found dead in the office. French police suspect the three were killed execution-style.

The women were alone in the office at noon Jan. 9, the Paris-based Kurdish Association Federation representative Leon Edart said, French daily Le Parisien reported. “They might have opened the door to their assassins,” Edart said, adding that 32-year-old Doğan worked at the information center. Their bodies were discovered early yesterday when someone tried unsuccessfully to contact them and people broke through the door after seeing bloodstains on it, discovering the bodies.

Cansız and Doğan were killed by a bullet fired through the neck up into the head, while Söylemez had injuries in the abdomen and forehead. Kurdish associations suggested that the perpetrators had fired with a silencer.

Zübeyir Aydar, known as the head of the European branch of the PKK, implied that “dark forces” linked with the Turkish deep state might be behind the killings. Speaking to the Kurdish website Rudaw, Aydar said: “The attacks are perpetrated against the talks [with Öcalan] on İmralı island. This attack was aimed against the new process.”

In an attempt to disarm the PKK, Turkish government dispatched National Intelligence Agency (MİT) chief Hakan Fidan for talks with Öcalan.

Cansız, an Alevi from Tunceli with the codename “Sara,” was thought to be in charge of the PKK’s Germany branch and was reported to be very trusted by Murat Karayılan, the de facto leader of the organization.

Doğan, a leading member of the KNK, which is close to the PKK’s European activities, was known to many in the community through her work, said Valls.