FROM: http://www.ozgurluk.org/press/msg00015.html

Guardian article on prison crackdown, and DHKC letter in response
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(Guardian article at end)

The article on page 12 of "The Guardian" on December 22, "400 inmates 
make last stand in Turkey" by Suzan Fraser, read like the pure 
product of a Turkish government press briefing.

The article says soldiers shouted through megaphones to prisoners to 
get them to surrender, "Think of your parents waiting in front of the 
prison". 

Since these same soldiers and police have frequently assaulted the 
relatives of prisoners over the years, especially during prison 
visits, it is doubtful whether they enjoy much credibility.

The government has done its best to stress its alleged lack of 
control in the prisons to justify its assault now, which a number of 
human rights organisations like Amnesty International have 
criticised. In fact, wardens could search prisoners' compounds when 
they wished to. The government's real problem is that thousands of 
highly politicised prisoners are concentrated together. In the end 
the government is targeting the political ideas the prisoners hold. 
That is why it wants to put the prisoners in isolation cells.

The article claims the prisoners have little support. But hundreds of 
people have been arrested in Turkey for demonstrating against the 
assault by state forces, and it is in fact dangerous to be a 
supporter of the prisoners. In London, where the same degree of 
repression does not exist, protests and demonstrations, including the 
occupations on the 20th which attracted some British media attention, 
have involved a significant section of the Turkish-speaking community 
in this country.

The article only mentions the DHKP-C, which stands for "Revolutionary 
People's Liberation Party-Front", not "Army-Front" as given in the 
article. In fact prisoners from the Communist Party of Turkey 
(Marxist-Leninist) or TKP(ML), and the Communist Workers' Party of 
Turkey (TKIP) were also on the Death Fast, and TKP(ML) prisoners are 
certainly among those known to have been killed. Incidentally, the 
death toll is far higher than the official figures given.

You cite Turkish newspaper claims (hardly the most reliable source) 
that senior DHKP-C members live in Britain and Belgium. In both 
countries, there are active DHKC Information Bureaus. Our Bureau in 
London has publicised the state in Turkey's use of torture and 
disappearances for years and our office even has a sign and a flag 
outside. When the press in Turkey makes claims about our organisation 
in Europe, it often happens that European police forces then raid 
homes, offices and associations. We hope that so liberal a newspaper 
as "The Guardian" is not lending itself to such a shameful proceeding.

We consider the US and European governments to be accomplices in the 
crime of the authorities in Turkey.

DHKC (Revolutionary People's Liberation Front)
London Information Bureau 97 Kingsland High Street, Dalston, E8 2PB.
(0207) 254 1266 [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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ARTICLE FROM SATURDAYS GUARDIAN
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400 inmates make last stand in Turkey

Government approves amnesty to cut overcrowding in jails as protests 
at all but one prison are crushed

Suzan Fraser in Ankara, Friday December 22, 2000

Soldiers pressed defiant inmates to end their standoff in the last 
Turkish prison holding out against authorities, after more than 150 
left-wing inmates in another jail surrendered.

Prisoners across the country had embarked on a two-month hunger 
strike to protest at plans to move them from huge, packed prison 
wards to small cells.

After three days of raids on more than 20 prisons, 400 inmates 
remained barricaded in Istanbul's Umraniye prison. The standoff at 
Canakkale prison in western Turkey ended earlier yesterday, with the 
interior ministry saying that two more prisoners had been found dead, 
taking the official death toll in the raids to 19 inmates and two 
soldiers.

NTV television showed some of the Canakkale inmates jumping out of a 
hole soldiers had smashed in a prison wall and crawling towards the 
heavily armed security forces.

Earlier, soldiers shouted "Life is beautiful" and "If you are not 
thinking of yourselves, think of your parents waiting in front of the 
prison" through megaphones, the daily Milliyet reported.

Parliament yesterday approved an amnesty that will nearly halve the 
country's prison population of 72,000 and help end overcrowding. 
Parliament passed the amnesty bill for the second time after 
President Ahmet Necdet Sezer had previously vetoed it. Turkish 
residents cannot veto a bill twice.

Officials have said it is vital for Turkey to reduce jail numbers as 
it struggles to regain control of prisons where inmates often live in 
wards that house up to 100 people.

Political groups frequently run wards like indoctrination centres and 
bar warders from entering. Poorly paid guards are bribed and 
threatened and telephones and weapons smuggled in.

Convicted murderers and thieves will benefit from the amnesty, but 
rapists, corrupt state officials, drug traffickers and those accused 
of crimes against the state, such as Kurdish guerrillas and leftwing 
and Islamic militants, will not.

Although hundreds have demonstrated in the streets in support of the 
prisoners, the police raids appear to have been popular. The 
prisoners are mostly from fringe groups that have little support and 
many Turks have been critical of the government for not reining in 
the prisoners earlier.

"It is ... a great shame that the state has allowed the current mess 
in the prisons to prevail for so long without taking effective 
steps," wrote Ilnur Cevik, editor-in-chief of the Turkish Daily News.

The newspaper Radikal quoted the interior minister, Sadettin Tantan, 
as saying that the government had chosen to take the "slow road" and 
use psychological warfare to end the siege.

At Umraniye prison shots were heard throughout the day, the 
independent Human Rights Association said. Security forces, throwing 
tear gas from holes drilled in the prison, were closing in on the 
prisoners who had barricaded themselves in, the news agency Anatolia 
said.

The protesters

. The Revolutionary People's Liberation Army-Front, DHKP-C, which 
organised uprising, aims to replace government in Ankara with 
revolutionary republic

. Up to 1,000 DHKP-C inmates said to be involved

. Its gunmen have targeted generals, police officers, government 
officials and US military missions

. Several senior members said by the Turkish press to live in Britain 
and Belgium






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