All of Turkey’s parties and nongovernmental
organizations should unite against terrorism just like Spain did against
ETA, which declared an end to a half-century of armed struggle for a
separate Basque state on Oct. 21, Turkey’s prime minister has said.
“My dear friend Spanish Prime Minister [Jose Luis Rodrigues] Zapatero
said in his statement that this was an achievement made possible by the
joint stance of the ruling and opposition parties,” Prime Minister
Recep Tayyip Erdogan told the Hak-İş Trade Union Confederation’s annual
convention on Oct. 21, in reference to the outlawed Basque Homeland and
Freedom (ETA) group. “Therefore I call on all our political parties and
nongovernmental organizations: Let’s take steps together to produce a
common mind to solve this problem. If we fail to do so, this process
could last longer.”
Erdogan’s call came on the second day of the military’s cross-border
incursion into northern Iraq in retaliation for an Oct. 19 raid by the
outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party’s (PKK) that killed 24 troops and
injured 18 in the eastern province of Hakkari. The attack was one of the
deadliest launched by the group in close to two decades.
Despite massive calls from the public and the media, political
parties are still failing to find the common ground needed to end
Turkey’s terror problem, Erdogan said, noting that they instead continue
to criticize each other’s policies in the strongest possible terms.
A delegation from 13 different NGOs and professional organizations,
including the Union of Chambers and Commodity Exchanges of Turkey
(TOBB), paid visits to party leaders, including Erdogan and President
Abdullah Gül, to both express support and make a call for unity. “It’s
the day to act in unity for a strong and peaceful Turkey,” TOBB’s head
Rifat Hisarcıklıoğlu told reporters Oct. 21.
‘Disturbing approach from the CHP’
“This is not the day to shout slogans, it’s not a day for hostility.
We are such a nation that can keep its calmness and find common sense
even at very difficult times,” Erdogan said during a speech in which he
criticized opposition parties and European countries for their attitude
to the fight against terror.
Erdogan said the most disturbing approach came from the Republican
People’s Party’s (CHP) leader Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu, who invited him to
resign due to his supposed inability to solve the terror problem.
“What would you do instead if we resigned? This is not a coalition
government. We received every other vote in the general elections.
Calling on us to resign only means that you have acknowledged the power
of the terror organization,” Erdoğan said.
Criticizing CHP spokespersons for targeting the ruling party instead
of the PKK, Erdogan said: “This issue requires a solution. Please do not
try to turn this into opportunism. This problem is very difficult and
complicated and has foreign policy, security, socio-economic and
psychological dimensions.”
Erdogan also slammed the Peace and Democracy Party (BDP), which is
primarily focused on the Kurdish issue, for not putting distance between
itself and the PKK. “This nation will never forget those who have not
denounced such brutal terror acts.”
The prime minister also repeated his earlier statements expressing
the country’s determination in eliminating the outlawed group. Thanking
media representatives for the sensitivity they showed during a recent
meeting, Erdoğan repeated his call to the media to do their best in
unmasking the ugly face of the terrorists.
The PKK is listed as a terrorist organization by Turkey, the United States and the European Union.
/Hurriyet Daily News/