GFTU BGCM 2019 Minutes
will be hearing from our guest speaker and from Bro Manuel Cortes who led a
delegation to Turkey recently.
The Kurds remain the largest stateless community anywhere in the world.
They were pledged a homeland during the imperialist carve up of the Middle
East over a century ago and they were betrayed, not for the last time. The
failure of the Kurds to attain a nation state spread mainly across Iran, Iraq,
Syria and Turkey where 20 million Kurds now live, mainly in the south east of
the country. They have suffered long political oppression and cultural
oppression which has really escalated in Turkey over recent years, particularly
following the collapse of the peace talks between the Government and the
Kurdistan Workers Party, the PKK (more of that in a moment) in an attempt to
resolve the so-called Kurdish question. Political repression saw the banning of
Kurdish political parties and more recently the arrest and imprisonment of
proKurdish politicians from the People’s Democratic Party. Thousands have
been killed in the conflict with a million believed to be displaced in the south
east where the population live under military curfews and the humiliation of
military checkpoints.
Following the last BGCM where we were all privileged to hear some really
powerful and impassioned addresses regarding the Kurdish situation, in July
2017 we held a cultural festival at Quorn Grange to raise awareness and funds
towards the Freedom for Abdullah Ocalan – Peace in Kurdistan Campaign
which was established soon after the PKK’s leader’s abduction and
imprisonment in 1999. The short trial found him guilty of attempting to
overthrow the Government and sentenced him to death. Turkey abolished the
death penalty in 2002 as part of the plans for accession to the European Union
and under pressure from the national organisations his sentence was
commuted to life in prison without parole. He has remained in isolation as the
only prisoner ever since and denied access to visitors, including his family and
his legal team.
Their cultural history is a rich one and the Kurds have managed to maintain a
common culture and language over the centuries, a culture incorporating
poetry, music, language and a strong culture of story telling and folk tales and it
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