http://news.kuwaittimes.net/2013/03/21/kurd-rebel-leader-orders-ceasefire-three-decade-long-conflict-killed-over-40000/

Kurd rebel leader orders ceasefire – Three-decade-long conflict killed over 
40,000 
DIYARBAKIR, Turkey: Jailed Kurdish rebel leader Abdullah Ocalan ordered his 
fighters yesterday to cease fire and withdraw from Turkish soil as a step to 
ending a conflict that has killed 40,000 people, riven the country and battered 
its economy. Hundreds of thousands of Kurds, gathered in the regional centre of 
Diyarbakir, cheered and waved banners bearing Ocalan’s moustachioed image when 
a letter from the rebel leader, held since 1999 on a prison island in the 
Marmara Sea, was read out by a pro- Kurdish politician. “Let guns be silenced 
and politics dominate,” he said to a sea of red-yellow-green Kurdish flags. 
“The stage has been reached where our armed forces should withdraw beyond the 
borders … It’s not the end. It’s the start of a new era.” Prime Minister Tayyip 
Erdogan has taken considerable risks since he was elected in 2002, breaking 
taboos deeply rooted in a conservative establishment, not least in the 
military, by extending cultural and language rights to Kurds. He must now carry 
a skeptical conservative establishment with him, just as Ocalan from his prison 
island must marshal and keep the obedience of fighters in the hills of northern 
Iraq.

The road must be a rough one with suspicions on both sides. “The language is 
the language of peace, we need to see it implemented,” Interior Minister 
Muammer Guler said, condemning the absence of red Turkish flags at the 
celebrations. Rebel fighters would withdraw to their bases in the mountains of 
northern Iraq, which they have used as a springboard for attacks on Turkish 
soil. The Turkish air force has frequently attacked the strongholds. Ocalan’s 
Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), regarded by the United States, European Union 
and Turkey as a terrorist group, launched its campaign in 1984, demanding an 
independent Kurdish state in the southeast of Turkey. It has since moderated 
its demands to political autonomy and broader cultural rights in an area where 
the Kurdish language was long formally banned. “There is a strategic shift 
happening,” said Ertugrul Kurkcu, a parliamentarian from the pro-Kurdish BDP 
party. “The Kurdish liberation movement is moving from an armed campaign to a 
cultural one. And the PKK accepts this.” Ocalan, isolated from his fighters for 
over a decade, has won public backing for a truce from field commanders over 
the last week; but there have been signs of skepticism in their ranks. Last 
month, at a meeting with Kurdish politicians he accused them of unwarranted 
pessimism over peace talks. “I’m angry with them,” Ocalan said, voicing 
opposition to their “war system”, or strategy.

There are still dangers of division over the terms of any deal or between the 
PKK figures negotiating it. The live broadcast on national television of the 
scenes in Diyarbakir would have been unthinkable even a few months ago. 
Throughout the conflict, insignia of the outlawed PKK has been strictly banned. 
A huge bonfire was lit as Kurdish “Newroz” new year celebrations began, a 
soundtrack of Ocalan’s past speeches playing over loudspeakers. “War happens, 
but at some point you have to dress your wounds. This is our chance now,” said 
Bedri Alat, 73. “I remember peace. My grandson does not. He does not remember 
when Kurds and Turks lived as brothers. This is a last chance.” A settlement 
would lift a huge burden off Turkey, though it would be viewed with deep 
suspicion by hardline nationalists who fear Kurds would resume a drive for 
independence. “The PKK is challenging the state and this is a display of power 
by them,” said Ozcan Yeniceri, a parliamentarian from the MHP, Turkey’s main 
nationalist opposition party. “In place of a Turkish Republic, the road is 
being paved for formation of a federal independent Kurdish state.” The war has 
drained state coffers, stunted development of the mainly Kurdish southeast and 
scarred the country’s human rights record.

A peace would bolster the NATO member’s credibility as it seeks to extend 
influence across the Middle East, and remove a stumbling block from its path to 
join the EU. Two years ago, to the anger of hardliners, Turkish intelligence 
officers held secret talks with the PKK in Oslo and have been talking with 
Ocalan in recent months. Truces have been declared and secret talks held with 
the PKK in the past, but expectations this time have been fuelled by the 
openness with which the talks have been conducted. Leftist militants launched 
bomb and missile strikes on Turkish government and ruling party offices on 
Tuesday night in attacks which Erdogan said were aimed at derailing the peace 
process. “Peace won’t come just because the prime minister says so. A ceasefire 
isn’t enough to guarantee my rights and freedoms,” said Mustafa Guner, 22, a 
literature student in Diyarbakir, sipping tea at a nearby cafe in a restored 
caravanserai. “I am hopeful, but I am also wary and I am anxious.” If a 
ceasefire holds, the path to disarmament and the reintegration of militants 
will still be long and vulnerable to sabotage. The fate of Ocalan, “Apo” to his 
allies, also remains uncertain, but any move to release him could be strongly 
opposed by critics who see any settlement as threatening Turkish unity.

The prospect of talks with the PKK would long have outraged many Turks who 
revile Ocalan and hold him personally responsible for the bloodshed. An upsurge 
in violence last summer appeared to lend momentum to the nascent peace process. 
Turkish intelligence officers began meeting Ocalan in October on his prison 
island in the Marmara Sea. In November, he proved his continued authority by 
ordering the end of a hunger strike by hundreds of jailed Kurds. — Reuters

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