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Kurdish leader calls for peace

March 21, 2013

Jailed Kurdish rebel leader Abduallah Ocalan has called for a ceasefire and the withdrawal of Kurdish militants from Turkish territory, ending months of secret negotiations between the leader and Turkey's spy agency.

https://p.dw.com/p/182HK
Demonstrators hold Kurdish flags and portraits of jailed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) leader Abdullah Ocalan during a gathering to celebrate Newroz in the southeastern Turkish city of Diyarbakir March 21, 2013. Jailed Kurdish rebel leader Abdullah Ocalan ordered his fighters on Thursday to cease fire and withdraw from Turkish soil as a step to ending a conflict that has killed 40,000 people, riven the country and battered its economy. Hundreds of thousands of Kurds gathered in the regional centre of Diyarbakir cheered and waved banners bearing Ocalan's moustachioed image when a statement by the rebel leader, held since 1999 on a prison island in the Marmara Sea, was read out by a Kurdish politician. "Let guns be silenced and politics dominate," he said to a sea of red-yellow-green Kurdish flags. "The stage has been reached where our armed forces should withdraw beyond the borders...It's not the end. It's the start of a new era." REUTERS/Umit Bektas (TURKEY - Tags: POLITICS CIVIL UNREST)
Image: Reuters

Abduallah Ocalan, the leader of the outlawed Kurdish Workers' Party (PKK) called Thursday for his fighters to halt hostilities and withdraw from Turkey as part of a peace accord seen by many as a major step towards ending the 29-year conflict that has cost more than 40,000 lives, most of them Kurds.

"Let guns be silenced and politics dominate," Ocalan wrote in a letter written from his prison cell which was read by a Kurdish legislator in the Kurdish language at a mass rally.

"The stage has been reached where our armed forces should withdraw beyond the borders," he wrote, adding "we are at a stage where our armed elements should withdraw from Turkey."

PKK Leader Calls for Ceasefire

"It's not the end, it's the start of a new era."

A crowd of more than a quarter of a million Kurds gathered for the rally in the mainly Kurdish city of Diyarbakir, waving placards with photos of Ocalan and chanting slogans calling for his release.

A giant banner across the front of the stage in the main square read "democratic solution, freedom for our leader Ocalan," as the crowd chanted "in peace as in war, we are with you, chief!"

Murat Karayilan, Ocalan's number two commander, said the PKK will abide by their leaders call for a ceasefire.

"We will implement with determination the process initiated by our chief Apo," Karayilan told the pro-Kurdish Firat News Agency.

"Everyone should know the PKK is as ready for peace as it is for war," he said, but added, "The PKK does not want war under any circumstance."

Karayilan, who has effectively been in charge of the PKK since Ocalan was jailed for treason in 1999, called on all sides to do their part to implement the ceasefire.

The ceasefire call brings to an end months of secret peace negotiations between Turkey's spy agency and Ocalan, who is currently serving a life sentence for treason on Imrili island off the coast of Istanbul in the Sea of Marmara.

Turkey announced in December it was negotiating with Ocalan with the intent of persuading the PKK to disarm and retreat. The talks, Turkey said, began last year after a dramatic rise in attacks by Kurdish militants against its security force.

The group is considered a terrorist organization by Turkey and its Western allies.

Following the statement, which coincided with the Kurdish New Year, Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said he was putting his faith in the peace process "even if it costs me my political career."

jlw/dr (Reuters, AP, AFP, dpa)