Controversial statue of PKK founder to be demolished
A Diyarbakır court has ruled for the demolition of a statue of Mahsum Korkmaz, one of the founders of the outlawed Kurdistan Workersâ Party (PKK), which was erected in the southeastern province of Diyarbakır on Aug. 16.
The statue was opened on the anniversary of the first attacks by PKK militants in the Hakkariâs Åemdinli district and Siirtâs Eruh district in 1984, in a cemetery that was opened last year in the Lice district for PKK members.
The court ruling comes one day after the Diyarbakır Governorâs Office filed a legal complaint on Aug. 17. The Governorâs Office also demanded an investigation of âthose responsible for the statue.â
Speaking at a press conference in the southern province of Alanya on Aug. 17, Oktay Vuray, the deputy parliamentary group chair of the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP), questioned how such a statue could be erected.
âThe statues of Gazi Mustafa Kemal Atatürk are taken down and his words are being removed,â Vural said, in reference to the founder of the modern Turkish Republic. âNow, the statue of a terrorist is erected.â
A group of relatives of soldiers killed in the fight against the PKK similarly reacted against the statue, while MHP leader Develt Bahçeli also condemned it, saying Prime Minister and President-elect Recep Tayyip ErdoÄan was responsible for an âugly attack.â Bahçeli said all votes cast for ErdoÄan in the Aug. 10 presidential election âwent to the PKK.â
Korkmaz was killed by security forces in 1986. Peoplesâ Democratic Party (HDP) Diyarbakır lawmaker Nursel AydoÄan and the co-chairs of the Party of Democratic Regions (DBP), Emine Ayna and Kamuran...
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