Solutions For The Kurdish-turkish Conflict
#1
Posted 06 August 2012 - 06:22 PM
In the last two days there have been fights between the kurds and the turkish army.
Are there any solutions for this conflict which is going on for a century now,? if so please share them, or if not is Turkey the next country going to be destabilized?
#2
Posted 06 August 2012 - 06:41 PM
That is the most powerful solution for this or any other conflict
Ayatollah Muhammad Saeed Al-Tabataba'i Al Hakeem
#5
Posted 07 August 2012 - 09:10 AM
The last two days the violence between the kurds and turks has awakend again.
In the last two days there have been fights between the kurds and the turkish army.
Are there any solutions for this conflict which is going on for a century now,? if so please share them, or if not is Turkey the next country going to be destabilized?
This is not a conflict. It is the result of turkish chauvinism. If the kurds were given the same rights as other turkish citizens to use their native language, the problem would be solved. Now you can be punished for using kurdish language in public. Stupid turkish chauvinists!
#6
Posted 07 August 2012 - 09:24 AM
But saying that there is no conflict at all there is just not true.
I might be wrong but I thought the language issue was banned a couple years ago, as we see allot of kurdish speaking people communicating in kurdish on national tv. Also when you visit turkey you will notice that allmost everywhere kurdish is spoken publicly. (this is no surprise as a large part of the turkish citizens are kurdish or have kurdish roots). Is it also forbidden to speak arabic in turkey?
As for equal rights and human rights it is true that turkey has to develop.
#7
Posted 07 August 2012 - 02:49 PM
http://en.wikipedia....eople_in_Turkey
In Turkey, the only language of instruction in the education system is Turkish.[1] The Kurdish population of Turkey has long sought to have Kurdish included as a language of instruction in public schools as well as a subject. Several attempts at opening Kurdish instruction centers were stopped on technical grounds, such as wrong dimensions of doors. An experiment at running Kurdish-language schools was wound up in 2004 because of an apparent lack of interest.[2]
Kurdish is permitted as a subject in universities,[3] but in reality there are only few pioneer courses.[4]
Despite these reforms, use of Kurdish in the public sphere and government institutions is still severely restricted. On June 14, 2007, the Interior Ministry took a decision to remove Abdullah Demirbaş from his office as elected mayor of the Sur district of Diyarbakir. They also removed elected members of the municipal council. The high court endorsed the decision of the ministry and ruled that "giving information on various municipal services such as culture, art, environment, city cleaning and health in languages other than Turkish is against the Constitution.[15]
This is despite the fact that according to the above-mentioned municipality, 72% of the people of the district use Kurdish in their daily lives. In another case, the mayor of Diyarbakır, Osman Baydemir, is being subjected to a similar set of interrogations and judicial processes. His case is related to the use of the Kurdish phrase Sersala We Pîroz Be (Happy New Year) in the new year celebration cards issued by the municipality. The prosecutor wrote: "It was determined that the suspect used a Kurdish sentence in the celebration card, ‘Sersala We Piroz Be’ (Happy New Year). I, on behalf of the public, demand that he be punished under Article 222/1 of the Turkish Penal Code".[15]
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