Killing in cold blood: How the Erdogan regime takes revenge on Kurds
The regime of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan
continues its repressive methods against the Kurds, prompting the MPs of the
pro-Kurdish Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP) to organize a protest in the
Turkish parliament on Sunday, December 13, due to their objection to Interior
Minister Suleyman Soylu’s defense of the police that fired on and killed the
young Kurd Kemal Kurkut.
Erdogan's police crackdown
The opposition party’s deputies raised pictures of Kurdish
victims to express their protest and dissatisfaction with Soylu’s defense of
the forces that shot the Kurdish student and killed him. The Turkish judiciary
even issued a verdict of innocence against the police officer accused of
killing him during the Kurdish celebration of Nowruz in Diyarbakir in 2017.
According to Turkey Now, 72 other policemen were charged, but none of them have
been prosecuted.
It is noteworthy that Kurkut was a Kurdish student from
Adiman studying music. He participated in the Nowruz celebrations in the city
of Diyarbakir and was surprised by the Turkish police who stopped him for
wearing a shirt with "Kurdistan" written on it. This prompted the
police to demand that he take off the shirt, and as a result of his failure to
respond, the police officers beat him. When he tried to flee from them, they
shot him until he fell wounded, and then they shot him again to make sure he
was killed.
To acquit the policemen, Turkish media outlets loyal to the
Erdogan regime claimed that the police killed a suspected suicide bomber, and
on November 17, a Turkish court issued a verdict of acquittal against the
police officer accused of killing Kurkut.
A Kurdish deputy prison
The Kurdish university student was not the first case of its
kind, which confirms the Erdogan regime’s suppression of the Kurds. The last case
occurred when the Turkish judiciary issued on Monday, December 14, a sentence of
nine years in prison for Kurdish HDP MP Rojda Nazlier, who was charged with
committing terrorist crimes and belonging to an armed organization in
Diyarbakir.
The Prosecutor of the Supreme Criminal Court claimed that
Nazlier, who previously held the post of mayor of Kocaeli, cooperated with
members of the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), which Turkey classifies as a
terrorist organization, and has covered up some of the party leaders who are
wanted for security reasons.
Continuous suppression
The Turkish president has always pursued the opposition HDP
deputies, especially since the electoral defeat of the ruling Justice and
Development Party (AKP) in 2019, when HDP was able to win some municipalities
and obtain seats in parliament, which is why the Turkish government is seeking,
through arrest campaigns, to disperse the opposition ranks through the arrest
of the party’s representatives on suspicion of association with the PKK.



