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Turkish town picks up pieces after two-week lockdown

-

Sahin Donmez surveys the damage to his house after almost two weeks of street battles between Kurdish militants and the Turkish security forces in the southeastern town of Silvan.

"Look. The fruit of 40 years of work," said Donmez, who fled the town with his family when the fighting began. "Gone up in smoke."

The local authorities imposed a curfew in three key districts of Silvan, a town of around 40,000 in Diyarbakir province, early this month.

It was the latest in a string of ongoing military lockdowns ordered by the authorities in mainly Kurdish southeastern Turkey to pursue "anti-terror" operations against suspected militants allied to the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK).

For 12 days, army tanks and elite snipers tracked fighters from the PKK's youth branch, the Patriotic Revolutionist Youth-Movement (YDG-H).

A deserted street in Silvan  southerneastern Turkey  during a curfew following clashes between Turki...
A deserted street in Silvan, southerneastern Turkey, during a curfew following clashes between Turkish forces and Kurdish militants on November 10, 2015
Ilyas Akengin, AFP

The militants dug ditches and erected barricades in a bid to hit back at the police.

The toll was heavy -- with five Kurdish fighters, an army officer, two police and two civilians killed, according to official figures.

- 'I have nothing' -

The office of the local governor of Diyarbakir region finally lifted the curfew in the afternoon of November 14, signalling the end to the military operation.

"A new house, a new life. We will try," Donmez said.

"From where did this start? From which sides did the shots come? We don't know," he said.

The authorities have hailed the operation as a great success, saying the town has been entirely rid of PKK militants who had threatened the security of every citizen.

People take pictures of destoreyed buildings in Silvan after clashes between Turkish forces and Kurd...
People take pictures of destoreyed buildings in Silvan after clashes between Turkish forces and Kurdish militans on November 14, 2015
Ilyas Akengin, AFP

But Nedret Yakan, 35, saw no consolation as she contemplated the cracked window of her hairdresser's salon with its shattered mirrors and smashed furniture.

"Twenty years of my life, wiped out in a few days."

Yakan sent her children to relatives in Istanbul. "If I am helped to repair my shop, I will be able to resume my work. But if I don't, I will not be able to devote 20 more years of my life to it."

The authorities blame the damage on the PKK, saying that if its armed militants were not present in urban centres there would be no need for such operations.

The restaurant, shop and apartment that Dogan Celik owned were devastated by explosives that he said were placed by PKK supporters.

"Last week I was rich. Now, I have nothing."

Locals and pro-Kurdish activists have also been angered by pictures of nationalist graffiti left on the walls allegedly left by members of the security forces.

"Either be a Turk and be proud, or if you are not a Turk, learn to obey," one piece of graffiti was quoted as saying. The interior ministry has ordered an investigation.

- 'Resume the peace process' -

The Turkish authorities have repeatedly launched military operations, accompanied by curfews, to back up a relentless four-month land and air campaign against the PKK.

On November 5 the PKK ended a unilateral ceasefire it had declared in 2013 to assist in the search for a permanent peace deal to end its three-decade insurgency, which has cost tens of thousands of lives.

The latest crackdowns have come amid a turbulent period in Turkish politics, with the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan regaining its overall majority in snap November 1 polls after losing it in June elections.

A nine-day military lockdown in the southeastern town of Cizre in September caused international concern over the level of destruction in the town.

Since November 13, the authorities have maintained a new curfew in Nusaybin.

Seeking to draw attention to the situation there, four deputies from the opposition Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP) have gone on hunger strike.

The authorities on Saturday declared an eight-hour break in the Nusaybin curfew to allow locals to stock up on provisions.

The HDP accuses the government of using excessive force and says only a permanent peace deal can resolve Turkey's Kurdish problem.

HDP co-chairwoman Figen Yuksekdag said those pursued by the government in Silvan and other towns were young people who needed hope in their lives.

"These young people who put up the barricades are angry over the government's violent politics," she told reporters in Istanbul.

"These are not fighters... These are town-dwellers, young people who grew up in this area."

She added: "We need to resume the peace process, it's the only way to solve the problem."

Sahin Donmez surveys the damage to his house after almost two weeks of street battles between Kurdish militants and the Turkish security forces in the southeastern town of Silvan.

“Look. The fruit of 40 years of work,” said Donmez, who fled the town with his family when the fighting began. “Gone up in smoke.”

The local authorities imposed a curfew in three key districts of Silvan, a town of around 40,000 in Diyarbakir province, early this month.

It was the latest in a string of ongoing military lockdowns ordered by the authorities in mainly Kurdish southeastern Turkey to pursue “anti-terror” operations against suspected militants allied to the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK).

For 12 days, army tanks and elite snipers tracked fighters from the PKK’s youth branch, the Patriotic Revolutionist Youth-Movement (YDG-H).

A deserted street in Silvan  southerneastern Turkey  during a curfew following clashes between Turki...

A deserted street in Silvan, southerneastern Turkey, during a curfew following clashes between Turkish forces and Kurdish militants on November 10, 2015
Ilyas Akengin, AFP

The militants dug ditches and erected barricades in a bid to hit back at the police.

The toll was heavy — with five Kurdish fighters, an army officer, two police and two civilians killed, according to official figures.

– ‘I have nothing’ –

The office of the local governor of Diyarbakir region finally lifted the curfew in the afternoon of November 14, signalling the end to the military operation.

“A new house, a new life. We will try,” Donmez said.

“From where did this start? From which sides did the shots come? We don’t know,” he said.

The authorities have hailed the operation as a great success, saying the town has been entirely rid of PKK militants who had threatened the security of every citizen.

People take pictures of destoreyed buildings in Silvan after clashes between Turkish forces and Kurd...

People take pictures of destoreyed buildings in Silvan after clashes between Turkish forces and Kurdish militans on November 14, 2015
Ilyas Akengin, AFP

But Nedret Yakan, 35, saw no consolation as she contemplated the cracked window of her hairdresser’s salon with its shattered mirrors and smashed furniture.

“Twenty years of my life, wiped out in a few days.”

Yakan sent her children to relatives in Istanbul. “If I am helped to repair my shop, I will be able to resume my work. But if I don’t, I will not be able to devote 20 more years of my life to it.”

The authorities blame the damage on the PKK, saying that if its armed militants were not present in urban centres there would be no need for such operations.

The restaurant, shop and apartment that Dogan Celik owned were devastated by explosives that he said were placed by PKK supporters.

“Last week I was rich. Now, I have nothing.”

Locals and pro-Kurdish activists have also been angered by pictures of nationalist graffiti left on the walls allegedly left by members of the security forces.

“Either be a Turk and be proud, or if you are not a Turk, learn to obey,” one piece of graffiti was quoted as saying. The interior ministry has ordered an investigation.

– ‘Resume the peace process’ –

The Turkish authorities have repeatedly launched military operations, accompanied by curfews, to back up a relentless four-month land and air campaign against the PKK.

On November 5 the PKK ended a unilateral ceasefire it had declared in 2013 to assist in the search for a permanent peace deal to end its three-decade insurgency, which has cost tens of thousands of lives.

The latest crackdowns have come amid a turbulent period in Turkish politics, with the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan regaining its overall majority in snap November 1 polls after losing it in June elections.

A nine-day military lockdown in the southeastern town of Cizre in September caused international concern over the level of destruction in the town.

Since November 13, the authorities have maintained a new curfew in Nusaybin.

Seeking to draw attention to the situation there, four deputies from the opposition Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) have gone on hunger strike.

The authorities on Saturday declared an eight-hour break in the Nusaybin curfew to allow locals to stock up on provisions.

The HDP accuses the government of using excessive force and says only a permanent peace deal can resolve Turkey’s Kurdish problem.

HDP co-chairwoman Figen Yuksekdag said those pursued by the government in Silvan and other towns were young people who needed hope in their lives.

“These young people who put up the barricades are angry over the government’s violent politics,” she told reporters in Istanbul.

“These are not fighters… These are town-dwellers, young people who grew up in this area.”

She added: “We need to resume the peace process, it’s the only way to solve the problem.”

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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