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From: Press Agency Ozgurluk <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Thu, 2 Aug 2001 13:22:39 +0200
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [Ozgurluk] AFP: Turkey forces Kurds to leave village

AFP 

Turkish rights group claims Kurdish villages evacuated by force

DIYARBAKIR

Turkish security forces have evacuated two villages in the country's
mainly Kurdish southeast by force and banned free movement in three
others, Turkey's main human rights watchdog said Tuesday. The Turkish
Human Rights Assocation (IHD) said in a statement that the Asat and
Ortakli villages in Sirnak province were evacuated last Thursday after
nearly two months of harassment by the local paramilitary police.

"Some 250 people, all residents of the evacuated villages, are now
waiting helplessly in (nearby) Beytussebap," which lies close to the
Iraqi border, the IHD statement said. Authorities had also banned all
entrances and exits from the villages of Ulucak, Dagalti and Hisarkapi,
and were threatening the residents with evacuation. The IHD said that
the clampdown came in the first week of June when paramilitary troops
raided the five villages, holding the villagers responsible for a mine
blast, which killed one soldier and injured ten others. "A total of 33
villagers were detained, questioned for days at the local police
headquarters and subjected to torture and inhumane treatment," the
statement said. It added that three of the detained were raped with
truncheons, given electric shocks, forced to stand under scorching sun
and had nails driven through their hands. The men, whose health had
considerably deteriorated, were currently being held in Beytussebap
prison with 23 other villagers.

The IHD added that its appeals to local authorities as well as the
interior ministry and the parliamentary human rights commission had gone
unheeded. The forced evacuation of and movement ban imposed on villages
was due to the "attitude of those who made it a habit to do evil unto
its own citizens", the IHD charged. It called for the immediate lifting
of the ban, permission for the villagers to return to their homes and
sanctions against officials blamed for torture. Turkey's southeast was
the theatre for 15 years of heavy fighting between government troops and
rebels of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) who took up arms against
Ankara in 1984 for Kurdish self-rule in the region. The conflict, which
led to allegations of gross human rights violations on both sides
including the forced evacuation and torching of villages, has claimed
more than 36,000 lives.
Fighting has scaled down since since September 1999, when jailed PKK
leader Abdullah Ocalan urged his militants to abandon their armed
campaign to seek a peaceful resolution to the Kurdish conflict. But the
powerful Turkish military has dismissed the peace bid as a ploy,
insisting that the rebels should either surrender or face the army.

-- 
Press Agency Ozgurluk
In Support of the Revolutionary Peoples Liberation Struggle in Turkey
http://www.ozgurluk.org

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