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German government bans Kurdish paper and Palestinian association
By Justus Leicht
17 September 2005
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On September 5, German Interior Minister Otto Schily, a member
of the Social Democratic Party (SPD) that governs in a coalition
with the Green Party, banned the Kurdish daily Özgür
Politika (Free Politics) and the Palestinian association YATIM
Kinderhilfe e.V.(Childrens Aid).
A large contingent of police officers immediately implemented
Schilys ruling. Four staff members from the newspaper were
arrested, including its managing director, publisher and editor-in-chief.
The reasons cited for this attack on the freedom of expression,
the press and the right to organise were not only specious, but
also expose the claims of the SPD-Green Party government to advocate
a peaceful solution to world conflicts. The German government
is seeking to muzzle Kurds and Palestinians, two oppressed peoples,
and is acting on behalf of their oppressors.
Two weeks before the German general election, Schily is posing
as a hardliner and law-and-order man, for whom fundamental democratic
rights count very little. The government will act decisively
against all activities that have an extremist or terrorist background,
he announced.
However, he carefully evaded any explanation of what exactly
made Özgür Politika an extremist or terrorist
organisation. He merely claimed that the newspaper was demonstrably
linked to the organisation of the PKK [Kurdish Workers Party,
now renamed Kongra-gel].
What are these demonstrable proofs? Schily answered:
The kind of the reporting they carry out! According
to Schily, Özgür Politika provides its readers
in Europe with information about the PKK and constantly passes
on instructions from the PKK leadership.
The kind of the reporting objected to by Schily
was described in a recent Secret Service report: the Turkish-language
daily paper Özgür Politika offers a forum to
Kongra-gel by publishing interviews or statements from leading
functionaries of the organisation. The paper regularly reports
about Kongra-gel meetings.
On this basis, Schily maintains that Kongra-gel and Özgür
Politika are one and the same organisation. According
to this logic, whoever regularly reports on banned organisations
or those the government deems disagreeable and relates what these
organisations say and do is a part of these organisations and
must suffer prohibitions and persecution.
In similar way, the Bush administration has slandered the Arab
broadcaster Al Jazeera as a mouthpiece for the terrorists
because it regularly transmits statements by armed resistance
groups or conducts interviews with their members, including Al
Qaeda. Al Jazeera staff members have been killed by US
armed forces in Afghanistan and Iraq.
The German journalists union DJU has criticised the banning
of Özgür Politika, saying, Police action
against a newspaper is particularly serious. It endangers the
confidentiality of informants in relation to the press and, at
the same time, the constitutionally guaranteed protection of the
press. DJU called the ban a complete overreaction.
Özgür Politika has appeared for over 10 years,
publishing over 10,000 copies of each edition. It is practically
the only Turkish-language daily paper in Europe that does not
support Turkish nationalism, and is the only one to regularly
discuss the problems of the Kurds in Turkey.
Its perspective is that of Kurdish nationalism, and it is close
to the most important Kurdish nationalist organisation, the PKK.
Fundamental and unbridgeable political differences with the PKK
and with Kurdish nationalism notwithstanding, the World Socialist
Web Site and Socialist Equality Party (Germany) condemn the
ban as a malicious attack on elementary democratic rights.
Schily did not even try to furnish any concrete proof to justify
his claim that Özgür Politika is an extremist
or terrorist tendency. He would find this difficult. For more
than five years, the newspaper has gone along with all the political
twists and turns of the PKK leadership. It defended the PKKs
glorification of the Turkish state ideology of Kemalism, and supported
the US invasion and occupation of Iraq.
As far as the claim of terrorism is concerned,
since 2000, the PKKsupported by Özgür Politikaformally
relinquished its guerrilla strategy. According to the High Court,
since 1996, the paper is not to be regarded in Germany as a terrorist
organisation. Even the Secret Service admits that its propaganda
since 1999 has been to advocate the cultural autonomy of
the Kurds within the borders of a democratic Turkey and
that its activities concentrate on improving the prison conditions
for the arrested PKK leader Abdullah Öcalan as well as demands
for the acknowledgement of the political and cultural identity
of the Kurds in Turkey and the inclusion of the Kurdish question
in discussions about Turkeys entry into the European Union.
This line is also put forward by Özgür Politika.
Schily did not explain what is extremist about this. His arguments
resemble those of the Turkish generals and state attorneys, for
whom any critical expression concerning the Kurdish question is
tantamount to separatism and support for terrorism. Against this
background, Turkey is one of the countries with the most imprisoned
journalists and bans on the press.
Officially, the European Union also urges Turkeywhich
is seeking full EU membershipto exhibit more democracy and
grant minority rights. For this reason, Kurdish nationalists,
including the PKK and Özgür Politika, have always
placed great hopes in the European Union.
The fact that Schily is now doing the opposite, encouraging
the most right-wing forces in the Turkish state apparatus, only
appears to contradict this. Germany, like other European countries
and the US, endorses Turkeys EU membership, not because
it would bring liberty and prosperity but, as Chancellor Schröder
recently put it, due to the geo-strategic significance of
Turkey. The country borders on the oil and gas reserves
of the Middle East, the Caucasus and Central Asia, where the West
has considerable foreign and security interests. In
other words, Turkey is regarded as a military and economic outpost.
This cannot be reconciled with democracy and prosperity for the
mass of the populationeither Turkish, Kurdish or Arab.
This could be seen in the other ban implemented by Schily on
the same day. He justified the actions against YATIM Kinderhilfe
e.V. by saying this organisation collects donations for
the social activities of the Islamic organisation Hamas in the
Palestinian areas. This is to be regarded as indirectly
financing their terrorist activities. Schily explained that Germanys
repressive action thereby contributes substantially to protecting
peaceful communication between the peoples from a disturbance
by terrorist groupings in the crisis-ridden areas of Israel.
This choice of words is remarkable. It does not correspond
to international law, according to which Palestinian areas have
been illegally occupied by Israel, but repeats the line of the
Israeli extreme right, which regards these areas as belonging
to Israel and insists that their crisis is a function not of occupation,
but rather of the actions of terrorist groupings.
The words occupied or occupation did
not feature once in Schilys press statement. The fact that
Islamists like Hamas, who endorse suicide bombing, have won considerable
influence among the Palestinians through establishing a broad
network of social support mechanisms rests on the misery, despair
and oppression created by the occupation.
For the first time, Hamas stood in elections in the spring
in Gaza and the West Bank. It received approximately one third
of the vote in the local elections, and in a number of larger
cities, particularly in Gaza, won a majority. Schilys ban
aims to suffocate political debate among the occupied Palestinians
through the force of the state, plunging layers of Palestinians
into social misery as punishment for their political preferences.
Schilys possible successor, should the SPD lose the September
18 general election, the present Bavarian Interior Minister Günter
Beckstein (from the right-wing Christian Social Union), welcomed
and supported the bans.
See Also:
Germany Interior Minister
Schily seeks introduction of preventive detention
[19 August 2005]
Germany: Turkish worker deported
for drawing welfare benefits
[3 August 2005]
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