Pro-Kurdish party risks ban as Turkey launches probe

Turkey’s top appeals court has launched an enquiry into the pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) over alleged links to militants in a step that could ultimately lead to a ban on the third biggest party in parliament, officials said on Wednesday.
The move coincided with Turkish
President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s pledge on Tuesday to strengthen freedom of
expression and rights to a fair trial in an “action plan” that critics said did
not address concern about an erosion of human rights in Turkey.
The HDP has faced growing pressure
after Ankara said last month Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) militants executed
13 prisoners, including Turkish military and police personnel, during an army
operation to rescue them in Iraq’s Gara region.
A senior member of Erdoğan’s ruling
Justice and Development party (AKP) on Tuesday endorsed nationalist calls for
the closure of the HDP, which has 56 members in the 660-seat assembly. It is
accused of links to the banned PKK, which it denies.
“God willing, we will shut down the HDP in the
eyes of the people,” Cahit Ozkan, a deputy parliamentary group chairman for
Erdoğan’s AKP, was quoted as saying by the state-owned Anadolu news agency.
“Our people have lost hope in this party. All 83
million are demanding that this party be politically shut at the ballots and
legally within the framework of the constitutional order.”
Earlier on Tuesday, nationalist
MHP leader Devlet Bahçeli reiterated his call to shut the HDP and called for
measures to prevent it re-establishing under a different name, as it has done
before.
“The HDP’s closure is urgent,
vital and mandatory,” Bahçeli said. “From head to toe, the HDP is in the swamp
of corruption and terror.”
“The judiciary has begun an enquiry,” an AKP
official said. “The appeals court has sprung into action. The possibility of it
being closed appears pretty high.”
Turkey has a long history of
banning parties, although they have often been able to re-form under new names.
The official said measures may be taken to prevent this happening again.
A crackdown on the HDP in recent
years has included the arrests of thousands of party officials and members,
while dozens of its elected mayors and lawmakers have been ousted. It was
defiant over the latest pressure.
“The efforts to shut us down will diminish them
further and make us grow more,” HDP co-leader Mithat Sancar told his party’s
lawmakers on Tuesday, recalling the banning of a previous pro-Kurdish party in
1994.
“After they closed the party the same political
tradition grew in waves,” he said. “They will see very clearly that we will
emerge stronger from this tyrannical darkness.”
Political persecution
The crackdown on the HDP has
included arrests of thousands of party officials and members, while dozens of
its elected mayors and lawmakers have been ousted.
Many HDP deputies already face
bids to lift their immunity from prosecution. The party’s jailed former leader
is among those charged over deadly 2014 protests in Turkey calling for action
to protect Kurds in Syria from Islamic State.
Another official said the appeals
court had sought from prosecutors’ copies of the indictment over the 2014
protests and details of cases against HDP deputies, and will examine whether
the party is a focus for PKK activities.
The nationalist party MHP, allied
to Erdoğan’s government, repeated on Tuesday its call for the HDP’s closure
over links to the PKK, which Turkey, the European Union and United States
designate a terrorist group.
More than 40,000 people have been killed in the conflict since the PKK launched its insurgency in mainly Kurdish southeast Turkey in 1984.