Turkish prosecutors seek to lift immunity of 9 Kurdish lawmakers
Turkish prosecutors will seek to lift the parliamentary immunity of nine
lawmakers of the pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP), including its
co-leader Pervin Buldan, news website Bianet reported on Monday.
The request will be made by the Ankara Chief Public Prosecutor’s office,
which will cite the deputies’ alleged illegal involvement in the “Kobane
protests” of 2014, Bianet said.
In September 2014, Kurds held large-scale demonstrations against a
Turkish military intervention in Syria that targeted the border town of Kobane,
otherwise known as Afrin. The town was a stronghold of Western-backed Kurdish
militias battling an offensive by the Islamic State (ISIS). More than 40 people
died in the protests, most of them Kurds.
On Jan. 7, a court accepted an indictment against those allegedly
involved in the protest. More than 100 people, mostly members of the HDP, are
facing life sentences on charges of orchestrating the event and supporting
terrorism.
The indictment is part of a government-backed crackdown against the HDP
on allegations that its members support the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party
(PKK), which has been fighting for political autonomy for Turkey’s large
Kurdish minority for more than four decades.
The government says that Kurdish militia in Syria are indistinguishable
from the PKK, which is labelled a terrorist group by the United States and
European Union.
Sezai Temelli, one of the HDP lawmakers whose immunity is threatened,
said the protests turned violent after Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan
said Kobane was about to fall, according to Bianet.
"ISIS was at the Mürşit Border crossing in September 2014, it was
carrying out a massacre. One of the most important places where ISIS was
stopped was Kobane," Temelli said.



