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Pro-Kurd party seeks 'confidence-building measures' from Ankara as PKK disbands

Pro-Kurd party seeks 'confidence-building measures' from Ankara as PKK disbands

Jordan Times13-05-2025
Men watch the announcement of PKK's dissolution on the News on a television screen inside a traditional Turkish tea house, in Diyarbakir, on May 12, 2025 (AFP photo)
ANKARA — Turkey's pro-Kurdish DEM party said Tuesday that it wanted to see "confidence-building measures" from the government a day after the Kurdish militant PKK announced the end of four decades of armed struggle.
Tuncer Bakirhan, co-chair of DEM, which played a key role in facilitating contacts with the PKK, urged the government to take concrete steps before the start of the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Adha which starts on June 6 in Turkey."Making some humane, concrete and confidence-building steps without postponing them until after the holiday is the right way for Turkey to move forward," he told reporters."We expect the government to fulfil its duties and responsibilities in this regard."His remarks came a day after the PKK said it was disbanding following seven months of shuttle diplomacy in which DEM passed messages between jailed PKK founder Abdullah Ocalan and Turkey's political establishment.So far, it is not clear how the PKK's declaration will benefit the Kurds who make up about 20 percent of Turkey's 85 million population, nor what DEM will get in exchange for facilitating the process.But observers are expecting the government to show a new openness to the Kurds.Many are hoping the move will result in political prisoners being freed, Bakirhan said."The demands we hear most are about releasing sick prisoners before Eid al-Adha... that would turn it into a double holiday," he said."It would be reasonable to expect some steps, even symbolic ones, from the government," Adnan Celik, an expert at the Paris School for Advanced Studies in Social Sciences [EHESS], told AFP.
"Freeing [Selahattin] Demirtas would be a strong gesture likely to speed up implementation of this historic decision," he said, referring to the former leader of the first pro-Kurdish party to hold seats in Turkey's parliament.
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