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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsTurkey Is Using ISIS as Cover for Its War Against Kurdish Activists
Too bad there was no Kurdistan established after WW i.
http://www.thenation.com/article/turkey-is-using-isis-as-cover-for-its-war-against-kurdish-activists/
Exclusive interviews with survivors and witnesses of an Islamic State bombing show that the Turkish government has finally declared war
on the activists ISIS attacked.
In the days and even hours before the bomb went off, the atmosphere among Turkeys young leftists had been hopeful, even upbeat. The countrys Islamist government had just failed to win a parliamentary majority, and socialist feminists in Kurdistan were managing to simultaneously keep the Islamic State, or ISIS, at bay and experiment with a new kind of local direct democracy. While some had worried that a violent backlash by the conservative ruling party might be brewing, the usual repression and harassment had somewhat ebbed. For the countrys progressives, it felt as if the region might at last be ready for a politics of secularism, environmentalism, and womens rights.
With a busload to the Syrian border, they intended to conduct a humanitarian mission to the city of Kobani, which was still struggling to rebuild after its destruction and attempted occupation by ISIS. Kurds in northern Syria have recently worked with the US military to beat back ISISs advance, and have formed the most formidable front against the Islamic State. American officials are careful to specify that they work with the Syrian Kurds of the YPG, but not the closely aligned Turkish Kurds of the PKK, whose organization is banned in Turkey. Kobanis resistance has been a major source of inspiration for the Turkish left, with autonomous municipalities in the Rojava region embodying the dual ideals of anti-Islamism and anti-capitalism. For young Turks weary of their countrys religious and autocratic leadership, Kurdistans experiments in self-governance were a promising realization of left-wing values.
On the morning of the trip, July 20, the group gathered in the garden of a cultural center in Suruc, and prepared to cross the border into Syria. They brought piles of boxes, filled with toys and baby care supplies for Kobanis children, plus materials to construct a kindergarten and plant a forest. They milled about happily, drinking tea, singing songs, and making sure all of the paperwork for the trip was in order. People were raising a banner and taking pictures. In conversation, they spoke to each other of a new phase, in which Turks and Kurds would finally unite in democratic peace. On that warm Monday morning, it almost felt possible.
DetlefK
(16,423 posts)Just... wow.