[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 97 (Wednesday, June 7, 2017)]
[House]
[Pages H4651-H4652]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TURKISH CRACKDOWN ON PEACEFUL PROTESTERS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
California (Mr. Schiff) for 5 minutes.
Mr. SCHIFF. Mr. Speaker, on May 16, a group of peaceful protesters
gathered at a public park outside the Turkish Ambassador's residence in
northwest Washington, D.C. They came from a variety of backgrounds--
Armenian, Kurdish, Yazidi, and more--but they shared a common concern
about developments in Turkey, including the crackdown on political
opposition and free speech in that country and Turkey's continued
denial of the Armenian genocide.
About a mile away, Turkey's President, Tayyip Erdogan was received
warmly by President Trump at the White House, with no mention of
Turkey's human rights abuses and growing authoritarianism. The
protesters felt, and rightly so, that they had to exercise their First
Amendment rights and raise their voices in dissent, the very dissent
which has been violently squelched by Erdogan in his own country.
What happened next was a chaotic and violent confrontation that left
11 people injured, 2 of whom required hospitalization. Tensions were
already high, with pro-Turkish counter-protesters outside the residence
scuffling with protesters.
When Erdogan and his entourage arrived, the situation quickly
spiraled out of control. As he exited his car, observing the protests,
Erdogan can be seen on video speaking briefly to his security detail,
and soon thereafter, several of these men, some of them armed with
handguns, rushed past D.C. police officers to violently confront
protesters, causing several injuries.
The images that you see to my right are indelible and bloody. A
Kurdish woman was put in a choke hold and told by the dark-suited man
who attacked her that he was going to kill her. Protesters, men and
women alike, were knocked to the ground and assaulted with kicks to the
face and torso.
This was not a scuffle. It was a full-fledged assault by professional
thugs on a peaceful protest. Such scenes have become common in Turkey,
where state-sponsored violence and repression have become the chief
instrument to cement Erdogan's power.
Selahattin Demirtas was, until recently, the leader of the Kurdish
HDP party and someone I had the honor to meet 2 years ago, and now he
sits in prison as prosecutors seek to sentence him to 143 years of
confinement.
Turkey has become the world's leading jailer of journalists, most
recently adding French photojournalist Mathias Depardon, held in
solitary confinement and without charge, to the ranks of 81 journalists
currently imprisoned.
Mr. Speaker, Erdogan cannot export the violent repression he visits
on his own citizens to our streets. The violence of May 16 can't go
unanswered or forgotten.
Yesterday the House unanimously passed H. Res. 354, condemning the
attacks and calling on the administration to pursue justice and hold
those who carried out these attacks responsible, whether they be
Turkish or not.
This is a good start, but it cannot be the end. The D.C. police
department is carrying out an investigation into the attacks, and
ultimately they will require cooperation from Turkish authorities in
identifying those responsible. Nothing that Turkey has done so far
indicates that that cooperation will be forthcoming, and indeed, rather
than show even the slightest contrition after their security forces
assaulted Americans, authorities in Ankara instead summoned the U.S.
Ambassador to lodge a complaint against the United States and police
officers who sought to keep the peace. The message from Turkey is as
clear as day: We can do as we please whether at home to our own
citizens or on your own American soil.
Mr. Speaker, I stand here today to affirm that we will not allow
Turkey to beat innocent protesters on the streets of our Nation's
capital. We will continue to pursue justice and to make clear that
America will always stand up for the right of peaceful and free
expression.
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