OKÇUOGLU v. TURKEY
Doc ref: 24408/94 • ECHR ID: 001-3320
Document date: October 14, 1996
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AS TO THE ADMISSIBILITY OF
Application No. 24408/94
by Mehmet Selim OKÇUOGLU
against Turkey
The European Commission of Human Rights sitting in private on
14 October 1996, the following members being present:
Mr. S. TRECHSEL, President
Mrs. G.H. THUNE
Mrs. J. LIDDY
MM. E. BUSUTTIL
G. JÖRUNDSSON
A.S. GÖZÜBÜYÜK
A. WEITZEL
H. DANELIUS
F. MARTINEZ
L. LOUCAIDES
J.-C. GEUS
M.P. PELLONPÄÄ
G.B. REFFI
M.A. NOWICKI
I. CABRAL BARRETO
B. CONFORTI
N. BRATZA
I. BÉKÉS
J. MUCHA
D. SVÁBY
G. RESS
A. PERENIC
C. BÎRSAN
P. LORENZEN
K. HERNDL
E. BIELIUNAS
E.A. ALKEMA
M. VILA AMIGÓ
Mr. H.C. KRÜGER, Secretary to the Commission
Having regard to Article 25 of the Convention for the Protection
of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms;
Having regard to the application introduced on 9 June 1994 by
Mehmet Selim Okçuoglu against Turkey and registered on 15 June 1994
under file No. 24408/94;
Having regard to :
- the reports provided for in Rule 47 of the Rules of Procedure of
the Commission;
- the Commission's decision of 20 February 1995 to communicate the
application ;
- the observations submitted by the respondent Government on 21
February 1996 and the observations in reply submitted by the
applicant on 8 April 1996;
Having deliberated;
Decides as follows:
THE FACTS
The applicant, a Turkish citizen born in 1964 and resident in
istanbul, is a lawyer. Before the Commission, he is represented by
Emire Eren Keskin, a lawyer practising in istanbul.
A. Particular circumstances of the case
The facts of the present case as submitted by the parties may be
summarised as follows:
The applicant is the owner of the publishing company Doz Basin
Yayin Ltd. Sti which, in April 1991, published a book entitled
"Batililasma, Cagdaslasma, Kalkinma-Paradigmanin iflasi"
(Westernisation, Modernisation, Development - the collapse of a
Paradigm). The book was an academic examination of the socio-economic
evolution of Turkey since the 1920s. It analysed and criticised the
"official ideology" of the State.
On 2 August 1991 the Public Prosecutor at the istanbul State
Security Court charged the applicant, as the owner of the publishing
company, with disseminating propaganda in view of the fact that the
content of the book amounted to propaganda against the indivisibility
of the State. The Public Prosecutor quoted in his indictment certain
extracts from a single chapter of the book in which reference was made
to "the Kurdish problem". The charges were brought under Article 8
paragraph 2 of the Anti-Terror Law.
In the proceedings before the istanbul State Security Court, the
applicant denied the charges and requested his acquittal. He submitted
inter alia that it was not possible to reach a conclusion about the
book as a whole just on the assessment of certain extracts from a
single chapter. He alleged that Article 8 of the Anti-Terror Law was
contrary to the Turkish Constitution and the international treaties to
which Turkey is a party. He asserted that there is a "Kurdish problem"
in Turkey, and that commenting or expressing ideas on this problem
cannot constitute an offence.
In a final opinion dated 18 March 1992, the Public Prosecutor
requested the conviction of the applicant under Article 8 paragraph 2
of the Anti-Terror Law, and the seizure of all copies of the book.
On 14 October 1992 the Court acquitted the applicant. It held
that the book as a whole was an academic work with no elements of
propaganda.
The Prosecutor appealed. He submitted that the book had alleged
that a certain part of Turkish territory belonged to "Kurdistan" which
the Turks had annexed and colonised. Concluding that the book
disseminated propaganda against the indivisibility of the State, he
requested that the verdict be set aside.
On 4 February 1993 the Court of Cassation quashed the decision
of the trial court.
In a judgment dated 5 August 1993, the istanbul State Security
Court found the applicant guilty. It first sentenced the applicant to
six months' imprisonment and a fine of 50,000,000 Turkish lira. The
Court, taking into consideration the good conduct of the applicant
during the trial, reduced his sentence to five months' imprisonment and
a fine of 41,666,666 Turkish lira. The court relied inter alia on
extracts taken from pages 51, 52 and 59 of the book. It concluded that
reference to a certain part of the Turkish territory as "Kurdistan" and
assertions about its colonisation amounted to propaganda against the
indivisibility of the State.
The applicant appealed. In a statement to the Court of Cassation
dated 15 December 1993, the applicant's lawyers asserted that the
prison sentence imposed on the applicant was unlawful because the
applicant, as the publisher of a book and not of a periodical could be
punished only by a fine. They maintained that there should not be any
restrictions on the expression of opinions in a democratic society.
They reiterated the defence which the applicant had made before the
State Security Court.
In a decision of 16 December 1993 which was delivered on 22
December 1993, the Court of Cassation, upholding the cogency of the
State Security Court's assessment of the evidence and its reasoning in
rejecting the applicant's defence, dismissed the appeal.
After the amendments made by Law No. 4126 of 27 October 1995 to
the Anti-Terror Law, the istanbul State Security Court re-examined the
applicant's case. On 19 April 1996 the Court held that the above
mentioned amendments could not be applied to the applicant's case as
he had already served his sentence.
B. Relevant domestic law
Article 8 of the Anti-Terror Law No. 3713 of 12 April 1991
"No one shall, by any means or with any intention or idea, make
written and oral propaganda or hold assemblies, demonstrations
and manifestations against the indivisible integrity of the State
of the Turkish Republic with its land and nation. Those carrying
out such an activity shall be sentenced to imprisonment between
two and five years and a fine between 50 and 100 million Turkish
lira.
If the offence of propaganda referred to in the preceding
paragraph is committed by means of periodicals, as defined in
Article 3 of the Press Law No. 5680, the owners of such
periodicals shall also be punished by a fine, to be determined
in accordance with the following provisions:
- For periodicals published at less than monthly intervals,
the fine shall be ninety per cent of the average real sales
of the previous month;
- [for printed works that are not periodicals or for
periodicals which have recently started business, the fine
shall be ninety per cent of the average monthly sales of
the highest circulating daily periodical.]
In any case, the fine may not be less than 100 million
Turkish lira.
Responsible editors of these periodicals shall be sentenced
to imprisonment from six months to two years and to half of
the fine determined in accordance with the foregoing
provisions."
In a judgment dated 31 March 1992, the Constitutional Court found
the clauses enclosed in brackets in the text of Articles 6 and 8 of the
Anti-Terror Law to be contrary to the Constitution and annulled them.
The Constitutional Court held that the annulled text would cease to
have effect six months after the date of publication of the annulment
decision in the Official Gazette. The decision was published on 27
January 1993 and therefore these clauses ceased to have effect as of
27 July 1993.
COMPLAINTS
1. The applicant complains under Articles 9 and 10 of the Convention
that his conviction for publishing an academic book constituted an
unjustified interference with his freedom of thought and freedom of
expression, and in particular with his right to receive and impart
information and ideas.
2. The applicant complains under Article 14 in conjunction with
Article 10 of the Convention that his conviction for publishing a book,
in which certain political opinions contrary to the State policy were
expressed, constitutes discrimination on the ground of political
opinion.
3. The applicant complains under Article 7 para. 1 of the Convention
that his conviction was based on a provision which did not constitute
an offence under domestic and international law. He asserts that the
relevant clause of Article 8 paragraph 2 of the Anti-Terror Law, under
which he was tried, had been annulled by the Constitutional Court. The
annulment took effect before his conviction by the court. He maintains
that at the time of the judgment there was no penal provision
applicable to print media owners like himself and that he had been
unlawfully sentenced by an analogy being made between his case and that
of an editor. He alleges that his conviction contravenes the principle
"nullum crimen, nulla poena sine lege".
4. The applicant complains under Article 6 para. 1 of the Convention
that his case was not heard by an independent and impartial tribunal.
He asserts in this regard that one of the three members of the State
Security Court is a military judge answerable to his military superiors
whose presence prejudices the independence of the Court.
PROCEEDINGS BEFORE THE COMMISSION
The application was introduced on 9 June 1994 and registered on
15 June 1994.
On 20 February 1995 the Commission decided to communicate the
application under Articles 10, 14, 7 and 6 para. 1 of the Convention,
to the respondent Government, pursuant to Rule 48 para. 2 (b) of the
Rules of Procedure.
The Government's observations were submitted on 21 February 1996,
after an extension of the time-limit fixed for that purpose. The
applicant replied on 8 April 1996.
On 4 December 1995 the Government submitted information
concerning the amendments made to the Anti-Terror Law (Law No. 3713)
and the developments in the cases of persons convicted and sentenced
under Article 8 of the said Law. The applicant submitted his comments
in reply on 11 March 1996.
THE LAW
1. The applicant first complains that his conviction for publishing
an academic book constituted an unjustified interference with his
freedom of thought and freedom of expression, and in particular with
his right to receive and impart information and ideas.
Thus formulated, the applicant's complaint is in fact directed
against an alleged infringement of his freedom of expression. The
Commission has examined this complaint under Article 10 (Art. 10) of
the Convention which provides as follows:
"1. Everyone has the right to freedom of expression. This right
shall include freedom to hold opinions and to receive and impart
information and ideas without interference by public authority
and regardless of frontiers. ...
2. The exercise of these freedoms, since it carries with it
duties and responsibilities, may be subject to such formalities,
conditions, restrictions or penalties as are prescribed by law
and are necessary in a democratic society, in the interests of
national security, territorial integrity or public safety, for
the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health
or morals, for the protection of the reputation or rights of
others, for preventing the disclosure of information received in
confidence, or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of
the judiciary."
The applicant further complains under Article 14 of the
Convention in conjunction with Article 10 (Art. 14+10) that his
conviction for publishing a book, in which certain political opinions
contrary to the State policy were expressed, constitutes discrimination
on the ground of political opinion. Article 14 (Art. 14) reads as
follows:
"The enjoyment of the rights and freedoms set forth in this
Convention shall be secured without discrimination on any ground
such as sex, race, colour, language, religion, political or other
opinion, national or social origin, association with a national
minority, property, birth or other status."
The applicant also complains on the basis of the same facts of
a breach of Article 7 (Art. 7) of the Convention. He complains that his
conviction was based on legal principles which did not exist at the
time of the commission of the offence.
The Commission recalls that in the particular case of
restrictions on the freedom of expression taking the form of criminal
sanctions, Article 7 (Art. 7) must be taken into account in addition
to the more general requirement of lawfulness laid down in Article 10
para. 2 (Art. 10-2) (No. 8710/79, Dec. 7.05.1982, D.R. 28 pp. 77).
Therefore it has examined the complaint together with Article 7
(Art. 7) of the Convention which in its first paragraph reads as
follows:
"1. No one shall be held guilty of any criminal offence on
account of any act or omission which did not constitute a
criminal offence under national or international law at the time
when it was committed. Nor shall a heavier penalty be imposed
than the one that was applicable at the time the criminal offence
was committed."
The Government first argue that at no stage in the proceedings
did the applicant invoke the relevant provisions of the Convention.
The applicant contests this argument and claims that he has
raised the substance of all complaints made before the Commission in
the domestic proceedings.
The Commission refers to its established case-law to the effect
that the person who has raised in substance before the highest
competent national authority the complaint he makes before the
Commission has exhausted domestic remedies. Even where the Convention
is directly applicable in a State's domestic law (as is the case in
Turkey), the person concerned may also rely before the domestic courts
on "other arguments to the same effect"(No. 7367/76, Dec. 10.3.77, D.R.
8 pp. 185, No. 11425/85 Dec. 5.3.85, D.R. 53 pp. 76). In this respect
the Commission notes that in the present case the applicant asserted
before the Court of Cassation that his conviction for criticising the
oppression of the Kurdish people constitutes a serious threat to his
freedom of expression and that the imposition of a prison sentence was
unlawful.
Consequently, the Commission finds that the requirement as to the
exhaustion of domestic remedies has been satisfied and that the
application cannot be rejected on the basis of Articles 26 and 27 para.
3 (Art. 26, 27-3) of the Convention.
As to the substance of the case the Government maintain that the
interference with the applicant's rights under Article 10 (Art. 10) of
the Convention was prescribed by law, i.e. by Article 8 of the Anti-
Terror Law. They state that in the impugned book the author made a
reference to a certain region of Turkish territory as "Kurdistan", and
asserted that "the Republic of Turkey had colonised these territories".
The Government assert that according to Article 8 of the Anti-Terror
Law these forms of expression constitute propaganda against the
indivisible integrity of the State. They also state that the comments
made by the author in his book constitute a provocation of enmity and
hatred between the Kurdish and Turkish societies which serves to
mobilise people revolt. They consider that the domestic courts
therefore interpreted the law reasonably.
The Government also maintain that the applicant's conviction was
part of the campaign to prevent terrorism carried out by illegal
organisations, and consequently served to protect territorial integrity
and national security. They submit that it is generally accepted, in
comparative and international law on terrorism, that restrictions on
Convention rights will be deemed necessary in a democratic society
threatened by terrorist violence, as being proportionate to the aim of
protecting public order.
As to the necessity of the measure in a democratic society, the
respondent Government state that terrorism strikes at the heart of
democracy, the fundamental rights which that concept enshrines and the
judicial and political systems. They state that the freedom of
expression constitutes one of the essential foundations of a democratic
society. However, in a situation where politically motivated violence
poses a constant threat to the lives and security of the population and
where advocates of this violence seek access to the mass media for
publicity purposes, it is particularly difficult to strike a fair
balance between the requirements of protecting freedom of information
and the imperatives of protecting the State and the public against
armed conspirators seeking to overthrow the democratic order which
guarantees this freedom and other human rights.
In this respect the Government claim that the decisions of the
istanbul State Security Court and the Court of Cassation did not exceed
the margin of appreciation conferred on States by the Convention.
Accordingly the Government submit that this part of the
application is manifestly ill-founded within the meaning of Article 27
para. 2 (Art. 27-2) of the Convention.
The applicant contests all these arguments. He maintains that
his prison sentence was unlawful because he is the publisher of a book
and not of a periodical and therefore could only be punished by a fine.
The applicant also alleges that his conviction was not for any
legitimate purpose under the Convention. He states that he was
convicted because he had published a book in which the author used
certain expressions such as "Kurdistan" and had asserted the
questionability of the "official reality" in his book. The applicant
considers that the views expressed by the author were within the limits
of permissible criticisim.
Furthermore the applicant maintains that the criminal sanctions
imposed upon him were not necessary in a democratic society. He
explains in this connection that the book in question, taken as a
whole, was an academic work with no elements of propaganda.
The applicant, in conjunction with the interference with his
freedom of expression, also complains that his conviction for
publishing an academic book, in which certain political opinions
contrary to the State policy were expressed, constitutes discrimination
on the ground of political opinion.
With regard to the amendments made by Law No. 4126 to Article 8
of the Anti-Terror Law, the applicant observes that they were made
after he had served his sentence and therefore were not applied in his
case.
The Commission has conducted a preliminary examination of the
parties' arguments. It considers that this part of the application
raises complex factual and legal issues which cannot be resolved at
this stage of the examination of the application, but require an
examination of the merits. Consequently, the above complaints cannot
be declared manifestly ill-founded within the meaning of Article 27
para. 2 (Art. 27-2) of the Convention. No other grounds for declaring
them inadmissible have been established.
2. The applicant complains under Article 6 para. 1 (Art. 6-1) of the
Convention that his case was not heard by an independent and impartial
tribunal. In so far as relevant, this provision reads as follows:
"1.In the determination of his civil rights and obligations or
of any criminal charge against him, everyone is entitled to a
fair ... hearing ... by an independent and impartial tribunal..."
The Government maintain that this part of the application is ill-
founded and abstract. In this context they state that the applicant did
not raise any complaint related to the fairness of his trial and the
lack of independence and impartiality of the tribunal.
Accordingly the Government submit that this part of the
application is manifestly ill-founded within the meaning of Article 27
para. 2 (Art. 27-2) of the Convention.
The applicant states that one of the three members of the State
Security Court is a military judge answerable to his military superiors
whose presence prejudices the independence of the Court.
The Commission has conducted a preliminary examination of the
parties' arguments. It considers that this part of the application also
raises complex factual and legal issues which cannot be resolved at
this stage of the examination of the application, but require an
examination of the merits. Consequently, this complaint cannot be
declared manifestly ill-founded within the meaning of Article 27 para.
2 (Art. 27-2) of the Convention. No other grounds for declaring it
inadmissible have been established.
For these reasons, the Commission, unanimously
DECLARES THE APPLICATION ADMISSIBLE, without prejudging the
merits of the case.
H.C. KRÜGER S. TRECHSEL
Secretary President
to the Commission of the Commission
ANNEX
Application No. 24408/94
OKCUOGLU v. Turkey
THE QUESTION OF
THE "NATIONAL CHARACTER" OF THE NATIONAL STRUGGLE
"A nation oppressing another cannot be free"
K. Marx
The Kurdish question occupies an important place in the analysis
of the National Struggle and of the evolution of the Turkish social
formation. Although extremely important, the Kurdish question and the
process of colonization of Kurdistan are the subject of another book.
Furthermore, the question is not exclusively related to Turkey. It
constitutes a genuine knot both in the making of domestic policies (the
form of political regimes) of four states (Turkey, Iran, Iraq and
Syria) in the region and the shaping of their relations with
imperialism as well as in the "specific" character the relationship
between these four neighbouring states has acquired.
It is mainly for two reasons that we intend to discuss this
question, even though to a limited extent, within the plan and scope
of this book: To reveal the irrationality of the official ideology and
the real nature of the National Struggle. In other words, whether the
so-called "War of Liberation" was a true "Movement of Liberation" will
be put to debate. The confinement of Kurdistan within the limits of
four separate states (ignoring the small area within the Soviet Union)
certainly gives the imperialists an easy "control" over these four
states. Although the Kurdish question bears great importance also in
the maintenance of the imperialist status quo in the region, we will
not offer here an analysis of this aspect of the question.
Those scholars, writers and thinkers who are geared to the
production of the official ideology, or those who refrain from
contradicting it, have taken pains to avoid the question. A handful of
scholars who attempted to take up and discuss this question
scientifically have been punished severely. They know that "to reveal
shame is even a greater shame"! Here the character of the relationship
between science and the dominant ideology is revealed once again. This
is just like what Napoleon said to university rectors in one of his
directives: "You will teach positive things suitable for the monarchy.
No metaphysics, no ideological chit-chat"...
Yet, however hard they may have tried to ignore it, to forget it
and to leave it to oblivion, this phenomenon is quite visible even
within a totally distorted history. If one does not consider another
people to be worthy of what he considers his people (or himself) to be
worthy of, if one considers certain freedoms essential for himself but
not so for others, can he be really concerned with freedom?
Every analysis of the evolution of Turkish social formation is
invariably doomed to remain impaired unless the Kurdish question is
incorporated in it. A sound analysis of the totality is impossible when
one of its integral parts is ignored. Any attempt to analyze a social
process by excluding one of its constituent elements will inevitably
undermine the scientificalness of that analysis. There exist so deep-
rooted double standards that some of the Turkish intellectuals "react"
to racist-fascist oppression in some far-off places in Africa, Asia or
Latin America but turn a blind eye to the tragedy a nation has been
going through right under their noses and are turned into fanatic
chauvinists when it comes to the Kurdish question; that they are
opposed to dictators except those in their past, and so on. The Turkish
intellectuals need certainly to do a self-questioning, and, in order
to do that, they need to get rid of the policeman in their minds, who
directs their thinking!
On the other hand, the development of the Turkish fascist
movement owes much to the racist policy of denial pursued against the
Kurds since the foundation of the Republic. Paradoxically, the "denial"
of the presence of the Kurdish Nation is both the most important and
the weakest chain of the official ideology. A nation that exists cannot
be vanished by "cognitive negation" and the objective fact remains in
place regardless of people's fancies and deliria. Doubtless, this does
not mean that fancies, hypocrisy and deliria serve no purpose at all!
These have always produced profits for some, have enabled others to get
bureaucratic or academic careers and high salaries and have helped yet
others to rise in the political arena.
In a book he wrote in the 1930s, which could have been published
as late as 1979 and was banned again after 1980, Hikmet Kivilcimli
wrote: "The purpose of Kemalism in Kurdistan, in terms of both
administration and culture, is to deny the existence of a Kurdish
People there and to annihilate and silence that existence in all of its
aspects. This is the aim of the administrative and cultural
policy". (1)
The name of a region that was known as Kurdistan and referred to
so in all documents in the Ottoman times has changed (!) in the course
of time. The region was called "Vilayet-i Sarkiye" (Eastern Province)
till the 1950s. During that period the words "Kurd" and "Kurdistan"
were deleted from dictionaries. Heavy censoring and self-censoring
definitely prohibited the use of these concepts. An Ottoman-Turkish
dictionary published before 1950 had only one entry under the letter
K: "Kürdili Hicazkar". [The name of a makam in Turkish music -
Translator]. This should certainly remind the famous scholars of the
Turkish Language Society of something! In the Ansiklopedik Türkçe
Sözlük (Encyclopaedic Turkish Dictionary) published in 1971, in its
second volume containing K entries, the Kurds are defined as follows:
"Name of a community comprising mostly Turks who have acquired another
language, speak a distorted Persian and live in Turkey, Iraq and Iran,
and a member of that group". The region which had been called
"Vilayet-i Sarkiye" till 1950 came to be known as "Dogu" (the East)
between 1950 and 1960. When the "Planning Period" began in Turkey after
1960, the region was called "Areas with Priority in Development", which
was abbreviated as "K.Ö.Y." ["Village"] in "scholarly" publications.
By doing this the planners proved how "scientific" they were. Once they
called the region a "village", they were to be able to determine
"scientifically" how the relationship between the village and the city
should be. Nowadays the region has got a new name. It is called the
"Extraordinary State Region" ["State of Emergency Region -
Translator"]. The official ideology is so skillful! It seems to have
gradually imparted to the region an "extraordinary quality". As a
matter of fact the region has been an extraordinary one, has lived
through extraordinary events and has been oppressed extraordinarily
since the 1920s, with martial law being the rule except for a few
years. In the absence of martial law, a de facto martial law was in
effect.
following definition: "Kurd: An Aryan people. Kurdish: The language
spoken by the Kurds, which is a mongrelized version of Persian".
Resimli Ansiklopedik Büyük Sözlük [Great Pictorial Encyclopaedic
Dictionary] (1982) says: "Kurd: The name of an ethnic group scattered
among various Middle Eastern countries and a member of that group"...In
the 1980s the military junta chose to make new and original inventions.
The "White Book" which the General Staff published and distributed in
hundreds of thousand copies in the 1980s offers something interesting:
"The upper part of the mountains, the hills, were covered with
snow which never melted, be it summer or winter. In sunny days,
a glass-like layer would top the snow. Above it would be hard,
beneath it would be soft.
When one walked on this snow, the place where he put his feet
would depress, making sounds like "cart-curd". This was the
reason the eastern Turkmens were called Kurds. What the
separatists call Kurd is in fact the name of the sound heard when
highlander Turks, those living in snowy places, walked on
snow". (2)
Having "effaced" Kurdistan from the world map, the official
history, or more broadly the official ideology, had to "vanish" the
nation inhabiting that place. A "remedy" was devised. The Kurds were
announced to be "mountain Turks". The Mountain Turks, although Turkish
by lineage, Turkish in essence, were different from the True Turks in
two respects. For one thing, they were mountain dwellers! And they had
forgotten Turkish as they lived in mountains! There must be an
interesting relationship between being a mountain dweller and
forgetting one's own language!
What is strange is that these people who forgot their own
language while inhabiting mountains were able to learn another
language. This may allow one to conclude that it is easier to learn
another language than forget one's own! They ended up speaking "a
distorted Persian"... This logic certainly allows another conclusion:
those who forget their own language cannot learn another language
perfectly! One cannot help but ask the question why these people were
not able to acquire a distorted Spanish or Chinese instead of Persian!
The denial of the existence of the Kurds does not only contradict
science but also fundamental human rights. It is said that the British
Parliament can do everything other than "making a woman out of a man
and vice versa" Similarly our official ideology considers a nation
nonexistent. Then it makes them forget their language and teaches them
a poor Persian!
While the Ottoman Empire, which had been a party to the
imperialist war, was being dismantled and transformed into the Republic
of Turkey, it took part also in the process of partitioning of
Kurdistan and got a considerable share. In this respect, the National
Struggle marks the beginning of the subjugation of the Kurdish Nation
rather than being the liberation of a nation in the true sense. For the
Kurds, one aspect of the National Struggle represents the partitioning
of Kurdistan in agreement with the British. Had the National Struggle
really been a struggle for the liberation of a nation, then the Kurdish
Nation would not have been subjugated and there would not have been any
need for meaningless compulsion, fabricated justifications and lies in
this respect... Otherwise, it is impossible to understand why a nation
who fought for her freedom subjugated, banished and denied the cultural
identity of another nation. The liberation of a nation means that she
determines her own destiny. If the self-determination of a nation
deprives another nation of the same, then whether the former is a true
movement of liberation, a true struggle for freedom, is debatable...
When one's liberation results in the subjugation and colonization
of another, this contradicts the concept of liberation. The liberation
of a nation from colonialism is a progressive movement. To quote F.
Engels "Freedom from national slavery is the basic condition for any
healthy and free development" (3) On the same subject Trotsky wrote:
"The dawning of national consciousness over an extremely suppressed
nationality, that nation's waving the flag of liberation not only
against political imperialism but also against cultural imperialism,
is an important initial step taken by that nation towards the
consciousness of her own human dignity and represents an immense
progress for humanity". (4)
No doubt such a movement has no need to fabricate false
"theories". Similar compulsions are resorted to only where a true
freedom movement has not taken place and freedom has not been
achieved... An irrational ideology produced for the purpose of
maintaining exploitation and oppression can only be built on ignorance,
denial, lies and distortions. Once lies are told, they necessarily
produce other lies. An unending road is inevitably taken, in which lies
are told in order to hide previous lies.
The methods considered valid and the language used have not
changed much throughout history. "The civilized man civilizing the
barbarian", "offering civilization to him", "the grafting of culture"
by "refined nations" among the "uncultivated", "helping them develop",
"the nobleness of the dominant nation and the roughness and ineptness
of the oppressed", "the God-given high abilities of the oppressor,
their aptitude for culture and civilization", "the incapability of the
oppressed, their inability to stand on their own feet", etc...
During the Agri revolt Yusuf Mazhar wrote:
"Because, as demonstrated by history, these are more capable than
the American Indians, but are far more bloodthirsty and
cruel...They are deceitful and are totally devoid of certain
feelings and civilized propensities. They have been a nuisance
to our race for centuries.
I think that it is not possible to break the dark spirit, the
rough feelings and bloodthirsty tendencies among this Kurdish
mass. Expecting that this will be achieved in the course of a
long evolution will cause them to undertake revolts like this
from time to time, to disturb peace in the country or to steal,
occupying the government constantly... There are great
differences between the northern and southern Kurds. We hope that
our government, taking this point into consideration as well,
will act in a definite and serious manner befitting (!) the motto
of the Republic." (5)
Hikmet Kivilcimli comments on what Yusuf Mazhar wrote:
"According to the ideology of the Kemalist bourgeoisie, 'the
Kurds are incorrigible'. The saying that 'the Turkish nation is
incorrigible' now fits the Kurds well. Given that they are
incorrigible... the logical inference immediately follows. Just
like the 'civilized' European Pirates and Pirate States, the holy
and sacred Turkish capitalism which is 'not totally deprived of
civilized propensities' has a historic mission to accomplish: To
eradicate the Kurds who are 'far more bloodthirsty' than the red
skins such as the Aztecs and the Incas whose names and traces
have been wiped out of the Earth by the white Europeans!... That
notorious policy of annihilation." (6)
Colonial policy is characterized by the destruction of the true
history of the exploited peoples, denial of their historical past and
imposition on them a version of history chosen by the colonialist
nation. Therefore, whatever may exist to remind of the history of the
oppressed, exploited and subjugated people (collective memory) is
destroyed. It is absolutely necessary to remove the roots which hold
them upright. This is exactly what the Kemalists did... In the
libraries, everything relating to the Kurds and to their history was
destroyed... Historical buildings constructed under Kurdish
principalities were demolished and military barracks were built on
their sites. (Birca Belek - Alaca Burç). The names of all localities
were changed. (7)
It is no surprise that all historical and sociological research
relating to the Kurds is banned in such an environment. While there are
departments of philology teaching dead languages, Kurdish, a living
language with millions of speakers, is not taught in any one of the
faculties of arts! Yet, their power to determine everything is
limited... There are institutes teaching Kurdish in many centres in the
West... and this irritates our rulers... Aren't the westerners doing
injustice by allowing institutes teaching a language deemed
nonexistent?
In a period during which the entire population except 3 to 4 per
cent spoke no language other than Kurdish, the use of Kurdish was
banned (in non-official situations as well). There were officials
assigned with the duty of enforcing this prohibition in the urban
centres inhabited by Kurds. Those Kurdish peasants who arrived to sell
their inconsiderable surplus product were caught by "controllers".
According to what Erzincan Governor Ali Kemal wrote, speaking Kurdish
was fined at the rate of five kurushes a word. Given that in the 1930s
sheep were sold at 50 kurushes each, someone who expressed himself with
two Kurdish sentences of five words each had to pay a fine equal to the
price of one sheep... Since it was obligatory to use the services of
an interpreter for the sale, proceeds from the sale were lost as
penalty... (8)
Article 39 of the Lausanne Peace Treaty reads as follows:
"The speaking of any language by any of the citizens of Turkey,
be it in their private or business relations, or in relation to
religion, the press and all sorts of publications, or at general
meetings, shall not be made subject to any restrictions.
"Although there is an official language, Turkish Citizens
speaking a language other than Turkish shall be provided with
appropriate conveniences to enable them to use their own language
verbally before courts..."
The existence of a distorted version of the National Struggle did
naturally lead to misinterpretations as well. In a work published in
1935, Nehru wrote: "Thus the Turks who had fought for their
independence not long ago oppressed the Kurds who demanded independence
for themselves. What is strange is the manner in which a defensive
nationalism has taken on an aggressive form and the freedom of one has
turned out to become subjugation of another. In 1929 the Kurds revolted
again. And that was suppressed at least temporarily. But how can one
oppress forever a people who insist on freedom and is prepared to pay
its price" (9) In writing these lines, Nehru wishes to see the National
Struggle as a rebellion against imperialism and colonialism. But that
is out of the question. This shows that minds are blurred by
attributions such as "anti-imperialism", "guiding the oppressed peoples
to liberation" or "the first national liberation movement in the
world". The development of Turkey's foreign policy demonstrates the
shallowness and meaninglessness of the foregoing claims. That the basic
preference underlying Turkey's foreign policy is in favour of the
colonialists-imperialists rather than the exploited peoples is also
closely related to the above fact. Otherwise, could a nation who really
fought for its freedom have subjugated another?
Failing to form a sufficiently clear opinion of the National
Struggle, Hikmet Kivilcimli says: "Another point is that Turkey herself
has been the scene of one of the important national liberation
movements. But, being placed under the power and dictatorship of the
Kemalist bourgeoisie, this liberation movement could not be freed from
capitalistic contradictions and attributes. And that was impossible.
As pointed out above, Turkey did not fail to play the role of an
oppressive nation in her domestic relations, although she was an
oppressed nation in her foreign relations". (10) Where a nation who is
oppressed in foreign relations acts as an oppressor in her domestic
relations, it is difficult to justify this by capitalistic
contradictions alone. For one thing, contrary to what Kivilcimli wrote,
Turkey was not "the scene of one of the important national liberation
movements". As we attempted to show above, the National Struggle was
neither a national-popular nor an anti-imperialist movement. A state
which itself was a party to an imperialistic war could not become anti-
imperialist. What was done in fact was to play down the Anatolian
movement as a trump against imperialists. Had the group of states with
which the Ottomans allied themselves been victorious, the situation
would have become clearly visible, leaving no room for illusions. The
National Struggle's real aim was to sprout the seeds of capitalism
among the ruins of a collapsing empire. Therefore the transition from
the Empire to the Republic did not necessarily imply "being the scene
of one of the important national liberation movements".
Arguments that the Turkish state cannot occupy a colonialist
position in its east, that Turkey is herself an underdeveloped country
and that a country oppressed by imperialism cannot pursue a colonialist
policy against another nation are widespread... This approach is
certainly the product of an illusion about the oppressor-oppressed and
the exploiter-exploited. A person's being oppressed does not prevent
him from oppressing another (even the poorest man can find someone to
oppress, can perfectly subjugate his wife and children), and the same
is all the more valid within the hierarchic capitalist world system.
Furthermore, the distinction between imperialism and colonialism should
not be overlooked. History offers abundant examples of those countries
who were exploited by imperialism, yet possessed many colonies. One
example is Portugal who possessed colonies in Africa until recently,
including Angola, Mozambique and Guinea-Bissau. Her position as a semi-
colony did not prevent Portugal from intervening in the destiny of
other nations. The state which was in a position to be placed on
bourgeois foundations upon the establishment of the Republic could be
colonialist by its nature.
Turkey's occupying a "lower" place within the hierarchic
capitalist world system does not imply that she cannot subjugate
another nation. The same is true for Iraq which has subjected the Kurds
to genocide. Certainly for Iran as well... Indeed, having been divided
into four parts Kurdistan has the status of an international colony.
The place occupied by the colonialists within the capitalist world
system, their being "neo-colonies", or their being exploited by
imperialism, do not prevent them from being colonialists themselves.
Another illusion stems from the fact that the exploiter and the
exploited are within the same "boundaries" and Turks and Kurds inhabit
the same geographical area in certain settlements, even without a
significant difference between their standards of living. Not only that
this does not constitute any proof of the absence of colonialism but,
on the contrary, must be seen as something facilitating it.
As a matter of fact, such a state cannot be expected to
discriminate in
terms of economic exploitation. Under the Czarist regime in Russia,
areas such as Kazakhstan, the Caucasus, etc. were colonies of the
Czardom despite "shared boundaries". Colonies do not necessarily have
to be located overseas, or in remote places. This illusion is partly
associated with the historical form of the European colonialism.
That Kurds can reach the highest echelons in the state apparatus,
in political parties and in business in Turkey is yet another source
of confusion. It is true that all doors are opened before those Kurds
who deny their "Kurdish Identity". The opening of all doors before
these people at the cost of the denial of their identity creates a
significant illusion. A Kurd denying his own identity is often turned
into a racist and Kurdophobe... This is an interesting psychological
state. There must certainly be a psychological or psychoanalytical
explanation to that... One who denies his identity is confronted with
the dilemma of filling the "vacuum" thus created with the identity of
the oppressing nation and exhibits the features of a "distorted
personality" psychologically... (Certainly, those mentioned here are
often members of the intelligentsia).
Under the Roman Empire, the greatest enemies of slaves were the
Liberti. In Turkey, one who has denied his Kurdish identity can
become the president of the republic, prime minister, minister,
professor, under-secretary, general, businessman, etc. In fact, these
people supply considerable ideological ammunition to colonialist
practices of the state apparatus and business. The impression given is
that there is no "discrimination" or "oppression". Thus these men
facilitate both oppression and its legitimation. Consequently,
democratic demands of the Kurds are rendered ineffective easily.
Here it would be wrong not to underline a fact: Despite the
Turkish state's racist, chauvinistic and discriminatory policy, the
other minorities, including the Turkish people as well, have almost
never adopted a "discriminatory", "racist" and "chauvinistic" position.
This sort of "extremist" elements are quite rare within the culture of
the working people. Therefore, the "discriminatory" practice is not
something approved of by the working people.
At this point, one needs to remember the substance of the
concepts of colonialism and imperialism and the meanings of these two
concepts. First, direct colonialism inevitably embodies the element of
force. In other words, direct colonialism is accompanied by military,
political, cultural and ideological oppression. This necessitates
physical presence of the colonialist in the colony. Imperialism does
not necessarily embody the element of force. Therefore imperialism is
more of an economic category. As a matter of fact, during the fifteen
years or so following the end of the World War II, classical
colonialism was "liquidated" but imperialist exploitation deepened.
Indeed, the form of exploitation that fits in the logic of
capitalist production is one that does not directly embody the element
of force. Capitalist exploitation was initially accompanied by the
element of force because this was necessary for establishing firmly
capitalist relations in colonies and breaking the resistance of and
liquidating traditional structures. The physical presence of
colonialist countries could be dispensed with after a certain stage at
which exploitation became a domestic category. After this fact was
recognized, after it was observed that exploitation became a domestic
category, imperialist countries withdrew their administrative, military
and other apparatuses from their colonies. As a matter of fact, rivalry
between capitalist states was originally one of the sources of
imperialist colonialism. Besides there were secondary factors including
"national prestige" and the like. The colonialist state makes direct
oppression and control possible, but its physical absence helps reduce
costs of exploitation (as long as local collaborators undertake this
business). Thus the colonialist state avoids a lot of spending, too.
The removal of direct political-military-police control in the
colonies was believed to be the end of colonialism. Today, however,
resources of the Third World are carried to imperialist countries on
a far greater scale than in the colonial period. Therefore, the
relationship between the State of Turkey and Kurdistan does not
constitute a category of imperialist exploitation. The situation is one
which also directly involves political, military, cultural and
ideological subjugation. Therefore, there exists the status of a direct
colony.
This is exactly where the distinctive nature of the National
Struggle lies. It is, in the last analysis, the annexation of a part
of Kurdistan. To quote Lenin, annexation "means the forcible
containment of a nation within the boundaries of a certain state". (11)
What is determinative here is the existence of two different nations,
one forcibly confining the other within her boundaries. But the Turkish
administration has always denied the existence of the Kurdish element
which it has subjugated since the 1920s. This official view was
expressed by the daily Son Posta, in its issue dated 11 April 1946, as
follows: "There has never existed a Kurdish minority in Turkey, whether
nomadic or sedentary, with or without a national consciousness" (12)
However, this denial is not something peculiar to the Turkish State
alone. The Iranian administration regards the Kurds who fight for their
autonomy as Persians. The Iraqi administration considers them Arabs.
It alleges that their language is a dialect of Arabic. The situation
is not different in Syria, either... Once General Cemal Gürsel said:
"In no period of history has there been an alien immigration to our
Eastern provinces, which could have left the present inhabitants there
as its sediments. On the surface of the Earth there is no race with a
distinctive identity that can be called 'Kurdish'". (13)
1. The non-existent Kurds revolt
Information available on the distant history of the Kurds is
contradictory. But we have a better knowledge of the period of the
Kurdish history after the Kurds were subjected to the process of
Islamization by Caliph Omar. Kurdistan, known as the homeland of the
Kurds, was conquered by Iranians in 550 B.C. The Kurds retreated to the
mountainous areas to resist the Iranians.
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