PKK leader to issue statement over process next week

PKK leader to issue statement over process next week

BURSA
PKK leader to issue statement over process next week

Mehmet Öcalan, brother of jailed PKK leader Abdullah Öcalan, answers reporters’ questions after returning from Imralı Island. AA photo

The imprisoned head of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), Abdullah Öcalan, has said the “democratization package” recently unveiled by the prime minister is “irrelevant” to the Kurdish peace process, adding that a full statement will be issued on Oct. 15 about the future of the process.

The PKK leader’s remarks were conveyed by his brother Mehmet Öcalan, who answered reporters’ questions on Oct. 7 after returning from Imralı Island, where Abdullah Öcalan has been jailed since 1999.

“Öcalan said: ‘The package does not concern us. It’s a package prepared by the government. There is nothing I can do at this point. I will announce my opinions on Oct. 15,’” Mehmet Öcalan quoted him as saying, without elaborating.

“The talks are being carried out by the BDP [the Peace and Democracy Party] group and its deputies. Öcalan said: ‘All I can say regarding the process is this: Is this package related to the process? If it’s not, I don’t know,’” he added.

The much-anticipated democracy package announced by Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan on Oct. 30 disappointed Kurdish political groups who claimed that it would not address Turkey’s need for democratization and the demands in the context of the Kurdish resolution process. 

The part of the package considered to be most important in pleasing the Kurdish minority was the proposal to allow education to be provided in languages other than Turkish in private schools. However, soon after the announcement, Kurdish politicians insisted that education in one’s mother tongue should also be made available in public schools.

The peace process that started off with determination and high expectations has stagnated recently, with reservations expressed by both the PKK and the BDP. 

The PKK had said it ceased its withdrawal from Turkish soil into northern Iraq because the government had failed to fulfill its promises about the resolution process so far.

The government, however, accused the PKK of not completing the withdrawal within the given time, accusing the group of only pulling out 20 percent of its armed forces up to now.