| December 2009 Kurdish protests | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Part ofKurdish–Turkish conflict,Serhildan | |||
| Date | December 11–15, 2009 | ||
| Location | |||
| Caused by | Ban of theDemocratic Society Party by theConstitutional Court of Turkey | ||
| Methods | |||
| Resulted in |
| ||
| Parties | |||
| Lead figures | |||
| Casualties and losses | |||
| |||
TheDecember 2009 Kurdish protests in Turkey were five[1] days of protests inTurkey that ensued after a December 11, 2009 ruling by theConstitutional Court of Turkey that banned the pro-KurdishDemocratic Society Party (DTP), after finding them guilty of having links to the outlawedKurdistan Workers' Party (PKK)[5] and spreading "terrorist propaganda."[6]
The DTP was formed in 2005 with a merger of Turkey's main pro-Kurdish party, theDemocratic People's Party (DEHAP), and the newly found Democratic Society Movement (DTH) that had been founded by formerDemocracy Party (DEP) MPsLeyla Zana,Orhan Doğan,Hatip Dicle andSelim Sadak after their release from prison in 2004. After being formed, the party called on the PKK to lay down its arms. The PKK responded by declaring a unilateral cease-fire that lasted until September 20, 2005.[7]
The DEHAP had won 6.2 percent of the vote in the2002 general election, failing to meet the 10% election threshold and thus failing to win any seats in parliament. So for the2007 general election the DTP fielded its candidates as independents.[8] In total, 726 independent candidates won 1,835,486 votes, a total of 5.24% and 26 out of 550 seats in theGrand National Assembly of Turkey.[9] Twenty-one independents then formed a DTP faction in parliament.[10] The election was however mainly a disappointment for the DTP as majority of votes in the Kurdish-dominated regions went toTurkish Prime MinisterRecep Tayyip Erdoğan'sJustice and Development Party (AKP).[9] The party however performed well during theMarch 29, 2009 local elections, winning 2,116,684 votes or 5.41% and doubling its number of governors from four to eight, increasing its amount of mayors from 32 to 51.[11] For the first time they won a majority in the southeast and aside from theBatman Province,Hakkâri Province,Diyarbakır Province andŞırnak Province which DEHAP had won in 2004, the DTP managed to winVan Province,Siirt Province andIğdır Provinces from the AKP.[12]
After the March 2009 election, approximately 50 DTP members were arrested. Between April and August 2009, more than 500 DTP members were taken into custody and 267 were indicted. According to theTurkish Human Rights Association, the government carried out three crackdowns against the DTP between April and October 2009 in which 1,000 people were detained, including 450 who were not told what they were being charged with.[13]
After surviving aclosure case in 2007,[13] on December 11, 2009, the Constitutional Court of Turkey voted to ban the DTP, ruling that the party had links to the PKK[5] and was guilty of spreading "terrorist propaganda".[6] ChairmanAhmet Türk and co-chairAysel Tuğluk were expelled from Parliament, and they and 35 other party members, including Leyla Zana, were banned from joining any political party for five years.[14] The 19 DTP members that remained in parliament joined thePeace and Democracy Party (BDP), which had already been formed in anticipation of the ban.[13]
In protest of the ban, the 19[13] remaining DTP MPs boycotted parliamentary sessions. Meanwhile, protests broke out all over Turkey's predominantly Kurdish region and in Western cities such asIstanbul,Ankara andİzmir and lasted the whole weekend.[4]
In Istanbul, several protests of a few hundred people broke out over the following few days. Protesters destroyed property and attacked police using stones andMolotov cocktails, and set street fires. Police attacked protesters using tear gas, water cannons, and pepper gas. 200 people, mostly Kurdish children, closed traffic and threw stones at buses inSultangazi andBaşakşehir districts. Police intervened with tear gas.[3] Turkish nationalists also attacked protestors, resulting in at least one injury from a gunshot.[2]
On December 11, shortly after the verdict was announced, over 1,000 people gathered outside the DTP offices inDiyarbakır chanting "Blood for blood! Revenge!" Protesters attacked police with petrol bombs and smashed security cameras. Riot police responded with tear gas and water cannons. In Istanbul, around 100 people gathered around the local DTP office with a banner reading "An End to the Attacks on the Kurdish People".[15]
On December 12 inHakkâri, about 1000 protesters clashed with security forces.[16] Police used water cannons to break up protests.[16][17] Protestors unsuccessfully attempted to lynch a police chief and an officer.[3] A young girl was hospitalized during the protests[3] and over a dozen protesters were arrested.[4]
InVan five policemen were hospitalized after violent clashes with protesters. 20 people were taken into custody during the protest in Van. InBeytüşşebap andCizre districts of Şırnak province the protests continued until late in the night, as protesters threw Molotov cocktails and stones at buildings such as post offices, banks, and the Beytüşşebap district governor's house. In Cizre, protesters blocked the road of the Habur Customs Gate, closing off the road toIraq. Police intervened to re-open the road.[3] Sit-ins were held inIğdır andŞanlıurfa.[3]
On December 13, 2009, protests continued in Yüksekova district. Police used tear gas and water cannons against protesters. Protesters barricaded roads and started fires in the streets. Shops were closed in all city centers of Hakkâri during the weekend.[3] Yüksekova protests had been ongoing since Saturday as crowds of DTP supporters threw firebombs and rocks at police vehicles.[4]
December 14, 2009, over 5,000 people Diyarbakır welcomed DTP MPs which drove into the town in an open bus. Later a group of youths started pelting police with rocks and ripped up street signs, and police responded with water cannons. Protesters also stoned a local AKP office, and several people were arrested. InDoğubeyazıt protesters threw petrol bombs and stones at police and police responded with tear gas and water cannons.[18]
On December 15, 2009, two Kurdish protesters were killed and seven injured when a shopkeeper opened fire on a crowd of protesters inBulanık,Muş Province with an assault rifle after the windows of his shop had been broken.[1][16]
On December 16, hundreds of people protested in theKurdistan Region's capitalErbil to protest the ban.[19]
On December 17, over 500 Kurds fromIran,Iraq,Syria and Turkey protested the ban inSulaymaniyah.[19]
Throughout Turkey, jandarma and police regularly harassed DTP members through verbal threats, arbitrary detentions at rallies, and detention at checkpoints. Police routinely detained demonstrators for a few hours at a time. Security forces also regularly harassed villagers they believed were sympathetic to DTP.[20]
Turkey's EU negotiatorEgemen Bağış criticized the ruling, saying that courts should hold politicians rather than political parties responsible for unlawful actions.[16]