[Congressional Record Volume 146, Number 44 (Monday, April 10, 2000)]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Page E521]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
RELEASING FOUR KURDISH MEMBERS OF PARLIAMENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF TURKEY
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HON. JOHN EDWARD PORTER
of illinois
in the house of representatives
Monday, April 10, 2000
Mr. PORTER. Mr. Speaker, I am supporting a resolution introduced
today calling for the immediate release from prison of four Kurdish
members of the Parliament of the Republic of Turkey. I want to thank
the gentleman from California (Mr. Filner) for sponsoring this
resolution of which I am a proud co-sponsor.
Currently, four Turkish parliamentarians of the now banned Kurdish
based Democracy Party [DEP], Leyla Zana, Hatip Dicle, Orhan Dogan, and
Selim Sadak, are serving prison sentences simply because they are
Kurds. Leyla Zana, the first Kurdish woman ever elected to the Turkish
Parliament, was chosen to represent the city of Diyarbakir by an
overwhelming majority in October in 1991. In 1993, she travel to the
United States to speak to officials about human rights abuses against
the Kurdish minority in Turkey and to testify before the Congressional
Human Rights Caucus. She was arrested on March 2, 1994 in the
Parliament building and subsequently prosecuted for a so-called
``separatist speech.'' Ever since then Ms. Zana, along with Hatip
Dicle, Orhan Dogan, and Selim Sadak have been jailed for the simple act
of specaking out for their people--the Kurds--the very people by whom
they were elected.
Turkey is a country which claims to be a democracy and is
continuously taking steps to be accepted as a western partner, as seen
with its current European Union candidacy. However, its recent actions
do not show any concrete effort to abide by international human rights
standards. In the last week, it has been reported that the Turkish
military has been massing troops and tanks along the Iraqi border in an
apparent pending offense against the Kurds. Equally as disturbing is
the re-arrest of Turkey's most prominent human rights figure, Akin
Birdal, for a speech he made in 1996 calling for a peaceful resolution
to the conflict between the Turkish state and the Kurdish Workers'
Party [PKK].
If Turkey wants to be treated as an equal partner with the west, it
is time for it to treat all of its citizens with equal rights and a
general respect for human rights. The time has come for Turkey to allow
the Kurdish people the right to speak their language and practice their
culture. Releasing these parliamentarians would show Turkey and the
world that Turkey is ready to respect the human rights of all its
citizens and that it is on the right path to be accepted by the
international community.
We must not continue to ignore or apologize for Turkey's outrageous
behavior. Six years is far too long for these parliamentarians to be in
jail, for speaking out for rights which are guaranteed under the United
Nations Declaration of Human Rights. We must speak out strongly against
these attacks and unfair acts and demand that Turkey end this lawless
assault.
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