Gültan Kişanak. Authors' own photo. All rights reserved.
The authors write:
The prominence of Kurdish women in Rojava (western
Kurdistan/northern Syria) inspired us initially to understand the historical
role of women in the Kurdish political movement. We were also interested in the
role of Kurdish women in challenging traditional patriarchal society and rules.
As part of this wider project, we wanted to hear the thoughts of Gültan
Kışanak, the female co-mayor of Diyarbakır, the largest Kurdish city in
southeastern Turkey.
She has been a long-term activist in the Kurdish
women’s movement in addition to being a former MP for the Peace and Democracy
Party (BDP). Ms Kişanak was imprisoned as a student after the military coup in
1980, and as a woman’s rights activist and Kurdish politician has witnessed the
violent aftermath of previous coups as well as the radically changing political
landscape over the past decades.
Given the recent developments in Turkey, we were
also eager to enquire about the recent failed coup, particularly in relation to
the Turkish-Kurdish conflict, prospects for peace and gendered implications of
recent developments.
Nadje Al-Ali (NA) and Latif Tas (LT): Based on your own experiences, could you tell us
about the history of women’s roles within the Kurdish political movement?
Gültan Kişanak (GK): Since the
beginning of the Kurdish political movement in Turkey, women have taken active
and important roles. However, we should accept that in the 1970s and 1980s
women’s rights were sacrificed for the sake of general political and national
aims. The slogan was to first have a revolution and then make some improvements
in women’s rights and gender equality. This idea was not only part of Kurdish
independence movements, but it was also followed by Turkish and other leftist
and democratic groups who wanted to change the regime of their countries.
A few select
women were given some positions to further wider political aims but they were
also forced to postpone any initiatives focusing on their own rights for the
sake of the national and political revolution. Key roles for women were not
taken by women themselves, but ‘given’ by a male-dominated political
leadership. After any success or political achievement, women were easily
forgotten and forced back into the home to continue in their ‘traditional’
roles. Sadly, this has been the destiny of women in almost all countries and many
contexts throughout history. So we started to prioritize
changes in democratic rights. This has become more important for us than the
creation of an independent state.
NA,LT: Was this trend also evident within Kurdish
political ideology?
GK: In the beginning, the Kurdish
movement was also influenced by this tradition. Our main aim was to promote
national aims and a revolution. The movement had to show a strong and tough
‘male’ face if we were going to have any success with these political aims.
Most of our male friends and comrades came from this old, patriarchal
tradition. Patriarchal structures, even including many progressive leftist
movements, did not want to change their position and include any real focus on
women and their rights. But after a while, we, in the Kurdish political
movement, began to strongly and continuously question – and we still question –
this perspective.
Especially
in the 1980s and 1990s, the issue of women's rights became important
internationally, and we benefited from this trend. We started not just
questioning the position of the state and the regime but also challenged the
role of patriarchal structures. We started believing and supporting the idea
that if there was going to be a real, sustainable and positive change than this
should include women’s rights from the beginning and at all levels. Without
real democratization and inclusion of all minority rights, especially women’s
rights, any new model will not be much better or substantially different from
the old one.
So we
started to prioritize changes in democratic rights. This has become more important
for us than the creation of an independent state. Within this new environment,
women began to assume important roles and created their own separate branches,
not just following what the general political movement says, but also creating
alternative policies, which the party must follow. This change is not just
limited to the political elements within the movement, but also includes
societal changes. It has influenced all levels of the Kurdish movement. These
changes were not easy and the rights were not just given by men: Kurdish women
have fought at all levels and achieved these changes despite barriers within
patriarchal society and despite the resistance of some of our male comrades.
NA,LT: Give us more details about the kind of changes
Kurdish women have achieved and what kind of positions and roles they have
gained?
GK: When society needs to make
sacrifices in difficult times, like conflict and war, male-dominated societies
may establish some new roles for women, including for women to sacrifice their
lives. But after all these difficult times, the same people suddenly forget
their promises to women. Similar to today, the 1990s were especially difficult
for the Kurdish movement. The state was oppressive and applied considerable
pressure. Women experienced those difficulties and paid a huge price. Women
organized and led many demonstrations against state brutality in villages and
towns. Many of our female and male friends were arrested, tortured and killed.
They had to defend themselves during their trials. They read and researched
about their rights. Women not only learnt about Kurdish rights and freedoms,
but as women who were simultaneously oppressed by the state and by society,
they recognized their rights, their equality with men, and their freedom. We
have gained confidence and trust in ourselves. We did not simply follow
established policies but also took part in creating new policies.
This was an
important element of the enlightenment of Kurdish women. We have gained
confidence and trust in ourselves. We did not simply follow established
policies but also took part in creating new policies. We came onto the streets
with new innovative slogans. We challenged not just the state's perspective but
also the established rules of society. The male-dominated political
establishment usually does not make women’s issues their main argument.
However, day-by-day, women’s participation and active demanding of their rights
while coming out onto streets has been increasing. When women come onto the
streets for a demonstration, some of them bring along their children. Others
leave their husband at home, to look after the children.
Gultan Kisanek photos. All rights reserved.
NA,LT: How do you assess the role of the Kurdish
political leadership in addressing these changes?
GK: Women have
fought a lot for their rights. But especially for the initial movement and
involvement you need a strong leadership. We are lucky that we had – and still have
– this. Of course the changes and evolution of the role of women within the
Kurdish movement and Kurdish society would not be easy without the full support
of the Kurdish leader, Abdullah Öcalan, who has been imprisoned by Turkey since
1999, more than 17 years. Since the 1990s, Öcalan advised women's organizations
to create separate branches to promote rights and equality within the wider
movement and society. He repeatedly said that if women do not create their own
free and autonomous branches, dominant and traditional men would try to destroy
women after any achievements. These separate branches should not be just
created within society or locally, but also within political parties and
guerrilla movements. He also advised men to abandon the traditionalist
perspective, the primitive ideology of men and masculinity. He believes that
most societal problems are the creation of dominant masculine men. This is the
reason why people make decisions for others without their agreement. This is
the reason that many wars and conflicts are so often about power and ego. If we
are going to change society, Öcalan and many of us believe that we should first
eliminate patriarchal masculinity and the ego born from this masculinity.
NA,LT: We have interviewed many different Kurdish
women, including peace activists, mothers of martyrs, politicians, mayors,
guerrillas, students, lawyers, community members and house wives. Different
women experience historical developments and struggles differently. You have a
very important role and hold a very important position as the co-mayor of
Diyarbakir/Amed. What kind of difficulties and problems have you faced as a
woman and a co-mayor?
GK: My own life story has followed the
development of the Kurdish women's movement. In the 1980s, I was imprisoned in
Diyarbakir prison. This had notoriously brutal conditions, with torture and
killings. To be Kurdish, to be a woman and to be leftist created triple
difficulties for me. I was kept in a dog kennel for six months because I
refused to say ‘I am not a Kurd but a Turk’. Our older women friends, our
mothers’ age were tortured because they could not speak Turkish. I still have
signs of torture from those days on my body. If we are going
to change society, Öcalan and many of us believe that we should first eliminate
patriarchal masculinity and the ego born from this masculinity.
This prison
was a place for me to question everything about humanity. It was a place for me
to recognize the importance of gender. It was a place for friendship and to
create strong bonds with other women. After my life in prison, I became a
university student. Together with many other Kurdish women, I took part in the
women's struggle, both while I was in prison and also during my time in
university. This destroyed any fears I had. In fact, the heavy burden and difficulties
developed my self-confidence. If I think back to those days, when I was a
19-year-old university student, it is difficult now to imagine how I managed
all those difficult challenges whilst almost continually being under attack for
my Kurdish identity, for my mother tongue and most importantly for being a
woman.
It was not
an easy period in my life and in the lives of many other Kurdish women. The
difficult conditions forced us to make choices: to surrender and accept the
state’s idea of a unitary identity and to assimilate – or to resist against all oppression. Under
those difficult conditions, we questioned the role of state and society, and
the established role and identity of women. But we also thought about human
rights, the importance of diverse identities, and our own Kurdish identity and
practices. We decided to work against all oppression since they fed on each
other. Without that historical development and those experiences, I would not
have my current advantages, and my strong role. The women who jump into
politics, without the kind of experiences we all had, may well face some
difficulty in the beginning. We fought with masculine politics at every stage
of our movement.
NA,LT: How did your political experiences develop
after your university days?
GK: In the
1990s, when conditions were very difficult and there was no sign of freedom –
just like it is now – I worked for newspapers where Kurdish and women’s rights
were the main issue. These were alternatives to the mainstream newspapers. The
conditions for journalists, especially for Kurdish journalists were harsh –
just like today. Some of our journalist friends were killed while they were
doing their work. I worked as a journalist for 13 years and published sections
focusing on women’s issue within the newspaper. But we also thought
about human rights, the importance of diverse identities… We decided to work
against all oppression since they fed on each other.
During the
hard time of the 1990s, many autonomous women's organizations were established.
I took different roles within these, and worked to support their activities. In
1996, the Kurdish political movement created a separate women's branch. This
developed into a system of political representation. In 1999 for the first time
three Kurdish women were elected as local mayors. This number more than tripled in
2004 and we had 14 women mayors. Most importantly, we started
co-chairing in 2004, although at the time this was not legal. But the women
were all pressured by their male co-chairs. They were perceived as assistants.
After 2007, women became more visible and powerful. The 2007 elections were
revolutionary for both Kurdish and Turkish women. 8 out of 26 Kurdish MPs were
women. Women became more confident as co-chairs and men had to accept them as
equals. Other political parties were embarrassed and started to introduce a
co-chair system as well. But it was not simply a matter of a quota and
co-chairing, but the actual style and work of parliament changed. Women did not
ask for permission any more to speak on important subjects such as the
defence budget. All these steps have helped Kurdish women to develop their own
independent branches. The aim was to put new brick on top of the existing ones
and so to move forward women's issues. We are becoming stronger with every
passing day.
NA,LT: What do you consider as your main challenges
in the past?
GK: It might be difficult to believe
but when I look back at my own experience and story, the hardest time for me as
a woman was not in prison. It was not my time at university or when I was
working as a journalist. But it was the struggle we had to fight in order to
get a women’s quota for MPs. During the time before the 2007 general election
when we made our first important moves towards a quota, our male friends were
happy about our hard work. We were organizing meetings and demonstrations, and
were facing the police on a daily basis as we worked hard in our political and
gender struggles. In the 2007 general election, the Kurdish political party
did not run as a party, because of the ten-per cent threshold, but put forward
independent candidates, and the Kurdish women's movement wanted to achieve a
women's quota even it was for independent candidates. We wanted an
equal number of male and female MPs. The 40 per cent quota for women had been
one of our party policies since 2002, but its implementation had been postponed
to the next election. We did not want any further postponement. We wanted the
policy to be put into practice. Our attempts created a big discussion within
the Kurdish political movement. There were several barriers from the
established political traditions and from dominant men. There were two main
questions: first how many women should be put into electable positions; and
secondly who was going to decide about these women candidates?
Gültan Kışanak's photos. All rights reserved.
NA,LT: A woman’s quota was already part of your party
policy. Why did many men in the Kurdish political movement object?
GK: We started co-chairing
in 2004… But the women were all pressured by their male co-chairs. They were
perceived as assistants. Yes, it was there and for that reason – theoretically
at least – they could not be against our demands. We had already had this as a
party policy for almost 5 years. However, some men created different excuses,
such as society was not ready yet. Other argued that women should be happy with
a smaller quota, and once society becomes ready we will put the 40 per cent
into practice. In other words, we were supposed to wait years or even decades
for society to become ready. They knew that a good number of women were going
to be elected and also that it was going to affect some men’s chances to become
MPs. We were ready to do political demonstrations in every part of the country,
to communicate with people in the cities, but also to go to villages, to talk
to old and young members of our society, to convince them about our role in
representing them. We did not want to fail for lack of trying. However, many of
our male friends continued to offer just a few positions to women. Even though
we started co-chairing in 2004, until 2007 they did not really include women
co-chairs in any meaningful way. They even called our female co-chairs Yenge (sister-in-law), as a way of
showing they were not equals but assistants. We wanted to change this symbolic
representation and instead make it full and meaningful.
Most men and
even some women following the old traditions did not want to recognize that the
Kurdish women’s movement was not fragile any more. It was strong enough to take
what it deserved. Yes, we had Leyla Zana as an example of an MP in 1991, but
her role and power did not come from women's organisations or representation.
She was the wife of a famous Kurdish politician, Mehdi Zana, a former mayor of
Diyarbakir, who also went to prison in the 1980s for his political views. When
Leyla Zana was first elected, her social status and her being the wife of
somebody famous was the main reason for her to be elected. Of course, later she
has become a very important Kurdish figure and politician in her own right. As
an elected MP, Zana had to face prison, along with several other Kurdish MPs,
and she stayed there for almost a decade, just like her husband and many other
Kurdish politicians. We were strongly against accepting a few
symbolic women. We wanted to exist and make decisions at all levels.
In 2007, men
in the Kurdish political movement accepted the number of women to be elected,
but they came out with a new offer: to put a few famous women or the wives of
famous men onto the list. According to our male friends, that would have been
easier for society to accept. But we said no. Because the number itself was not
going to be meaningful as long as the proper acknowledgment of women was not
recognized by men and society. We were strongly against accepting a few
symbolic women. We wanted to exist and make decisions at all levels. We also
decided that the female candidates should not be decided on by men or in joint
meetings. Women's organizations should decide on their own candidates. After
long and harsh arguments, we won this battle as well. We created a women's
election committee in parallel to the previous general election committee and
the women's branches decided on their own candidates. In the end, 8 out of 26
women MPs were elected in 2007. Almost all our women candidates had more votes
than their male colleagues. The women found it much easier to make connections
with different social groups. Their messages were much clearer. Society was ready;
even if the previous male dominated power holders were not.
Gültan Kışanak's photos. All rights reserved.
NA,LT: Many commentators see the involvement and
power of Kurdish women as a simple change in policy and practice. But your
experience illustrates that it is an on-going struggle that has been difficult
on many levels.
GK: It looks
simple now, but it was certainly not easy to put this simple action into
practice. Almost all our women
candidates had more votes than their male colleagues. The women found it much
easier to make connections with different social groups. The discussions before, and the results of the 2007 election marked a
radical revolution for Kurdish and Turkish women rights and position in Turkey.
First, the idea of women not being able to succeed was destroyed. Second, the
well-known male stereotype of society not being able to accept women was
challenged as well. Society actually welcomed women. Third, the general
tradition of electing only well-known, famous women or wives of famous men was
challenged. Women were elected with their own identity, from a mix of economic,
social, ethnic and religious backgrounds. Before the 2007 election, people in
our society still called women who had been elected as mayors ‘Mr. President’ (Baskan Bey). When a mayor visited
somewhere most people were expecting to see a man. They asked ‘where is Mr.
President’, and found it difficult to see a woman in power. When a woman mayor
was elected, people would speculate that the city was run by men behind the
scenes. The outcome of the 2007 election destroyed all these ideas and women
mayors or MPs can now be accepted with power without any shadows behind her. Our system
of co-chairs at all levels has become more visible, strong and stable
since the 2007 election.
NA,LT: Do you feel that you have achieved
gender-based equality within the Kurdish political movement and in Kurdish
society?
GK: It is not easy to make deep societal
changes in a short time, but it is happening. Now many Turkish and Kurdish
people may not know the names of male Kurdish MPs, or politicians, but they
usually know the names of Kurdish female politicians. 2007 was a big test for
us. But the real test of success is continuity and the normalization of gender
equality and representation in politics for the next generations. We have
worked very hard, sometimes more than our male friends, to make this happen.
The future generations, the young members of women's organizations, have
important responsibilities for the continuation of equality and to change the
established male-dominated tradition of power. We should also know and
accept that there are many women who have played passive or even active roles
in the continuation of patriarchal society. We should also know
and accept that there are many women who have played passive or even active
roles in the continuation of patriarchal society. There are
many women who have become masculinized and act like men in our society. They
are a barrier we need to deal with and change. If our progressive women’s organizations
ever relax with the power they have gained, then that power could easily be
taken away again by male dominated power holders. Equality of power must be
institutionalized and become one of the most important societal norms if our
advances are to continue.
NA,LT: How have
these changes translated into Turkish politics and affected the work of other
parties?
GK: Our new gender role and practices
have pushed changes in the Turkish political parties and the legal system. I
would like to share a few examples, beginning in the Turkish parliament, where our Kurdish
umbrella party at the time (DTP – Democratic Society Party)
secured a female deputy leader in 2007. This was a ‘first’ for any
political party in Turkey. This position allowed the leader, Fatma Kurtulan, to
organize all party politics, and to speak in the name of the party. Other
political parties joined in. The CHP (Republican People’s Party), which claims
to be a leftist party, was embarrassed by this initiative and they
also elected a woman deputy leader. And then the Erdoğan-led AKP
(Justice and Development Party) also followed with these changes. It has almost
now become a rule for political parties in Turkey to elect one male and one
female deputy leader.
The second
radical change was that for the first time in the Turkish parliament, women
started to talk about important issues, including defence, foreign
relations, economic and energy investments and the state budget. I was the
first woman who was elected to the commission of state budget planning and became
the only woman working with 44 men. Previously, women were almost always
limited to a few issues, like family matters and some social problems. All
other topics, especially those connected with defence budgets and policies, were left
to men to deal with. We challenged this conservative approach and our
female MPs started to make proposals regarding almost all issues.
This was
another shock for the other political parties. They could not understand and
accept that women should also take part on defence budget issues. They did not
want women to have any involvement with important state matters. They wanted women
just to speak about women's issues, children and family matters. We destroyed
this very bad, men-oriented political tradition.
The third
important change is that with our party co-chair leadership system and practice
we pushed for the Turkish legal system to be changed. Now it is legal in
Turkey, other political parties can use the same system.
However, until now, no other political parties except the Public’s Democratic
Party (HDP), the Kurdish dominated party, have adopted this practice in
parliament.
NA,LT: These very important changes have challenged many traditions in the Turkish
political system. Do you think these positive changes will continue and perhaps
further close the gender gap in practice?
GK: Of course the long history of
inequality has created huge gaps and it is not possible to close these in 10 or
20 years. After 2007 we did not stop. In the 2011 election, more women gained
power, and in the 2014 local election and the 2015 general election we have
reached almost equal levels of representation in the Kurdish political party,
as well as at the levels of city, town and village representation. This
is not something we were given. We have had to fight for every single advance. As a party,
we hold mayoral power in 102 different cities and towns in Turkey and in all of
these, the mayors rule according to the co-chair system, with one man and one
woman. We have had to fight for this. Our male friends started with the idea
that they could understand equality at the level of the political party, but
not for mayors. They thought it was a position where men can do better and make
decisions more quickly. After a long battle we have won this argument as well.
As you see at all levels we have to fight to have any meaningful equality. Now
co-mayors make decisions together and equally. One is not more important than
the other. We try to create full and permanent equality.
This is not
just about numbers of individuals but also about the equality of input from
different genders. We are now working on making the co-chair system at the
mayoral level legal: it is practiced de facto by us but is not yet legal. But
we made similar changes around political leadership and I believe we will do it
at mayoral level too. As a party and as a community, we have increased trust in
women's roles and positions.
This is not
something we were given. We have had to fight for every single advance. For
that reason I want to believe that these rights and the fight for equality is
not going to be taken away from women. But we cannot relax and must keep on
working even harder than we have already done.
Gültan Kışanak's photos. All rights reserved.
NA,LT: From your
experiences we can see the creation of any permanent equality is not an easy
process. The outcome of our research in the Middle East but also other contexts
around the globe indicate that in many places successful women forget their
gendered identity after a while. Especially women leaders often buy into and
project masculinist identities. As co-mayor of Diyarbakir what are the
advantages or disadvantages of working as a woman? How much, and in what ways
can you represent your gender identity?
GK: To be mayor of Diyarbakir is a very
important and honourable position. Many of our
male friends say that I can do it, because I have this great experience unlike
other women. They do not want to see me as a result of the success of the
Kurdish women's movement. However, this can be sometimes a problem, especially
if you come from a strong political background, like me. To have the experience
of my political background and having been an MP for two terms, as well as
having been the co-chair of the party in the past might all look like an
advantage. But in practice, all this does not help women’s rights in general.
Many of our male friends say that I can do it, because I have this great
experience unlike other women. They do not want to see me as a result of the
success of the Kurdish women's movement. Instead they want to believe and see
that Gültan is an exception. I try to explain and fight against this very wrong
assumption. There is the strong power of the Kurdish women's movement behind my
individual success. Without this movement, I would not be here. We, within the
Kurdish women's movement, now try to make those still adhering to the
patriarchal tradition understand that every woman can be as successful as every
man, at least if they are given equal support, chances and trust. My story is
not just my story; it is the story of the success of Kurdish women.
Another
danger we should be aware of is that those in the male dominated tradition do
not want to see a successful woman as a woman any more. They
de-genderise successful women. They try to kill our gender identity, to see us
as men, even expecting us to act like men. They believe that every successful
woman has male hormones. We must not tolerate this. They do not mind if I as a
Gültan, co-mayor of Diyarbakir, enter male areas, such as mosques or teashops.
But they don’t want me as a woman. They say: ‘ you are welcome, because you are
our President, but we don’t want other women here.’ According to them, if somebody is mayor, they have reached the level of
men. When I remind them that I am also a woman they still hesitate to accept
this idea. As you can see, there are still many barriers. One ends and another
one starts.
NA,LT: If we look
at work places and traditionally male dominated public spaces more broadly,
what level of change have you witnessed over the last years?
GK: There were not any women deputy
mayors previously in Diyarbakir. All four deputies were men. After several
months of battles we managed to get a position for women. There were 19
different departments below the mayor of Diyarbakir and women were managing
just two of them. Now we have increased this to six, but the aim is to have
equal numbers. The problem was not that we did not have qualified women for
these positions before, in fact we had much better qualified women than men
ready to work. But these positions were seen as positions for men.
Many women
also accepted these traditions until recently. As part of Diyarbakir
municipality, we have established a special department named Department of
Women Policies. There are no similar examples of this in Turkey in any other
local areas. This new department will have three main foci: 1. to deal
with and reduce violence against women; 2. to increase women’s education,
including making them aware of their rights; 3. to help women gain new skills
and become more economically independent. This women’s department has the right
and a sufficiently senior position to observe all investment programs and to
evaluate to what extent these programs include the gender dimension or not.
Our aim is
to confront all male-occupied spaces and make
women more independent socially, economically, and legally. Our previous mayor,
Mr. Osman Baydemir, also tried to challenge this male dominated ideology.
During his time, 20 women were hired for fire-fighter positions and 15 for bus
driver positions. These are very important changes. The aim of these policies
was to break down traditional barriers. But their male colleagues and the
established male ideology made life very difficult for these female fire
fighters and bus drivers. Many of them wanted to return to office work. Our
male friends defended their actions and claimed that ‘fire-fighter and bus
drivers are heavy jobs, requiring 24 hour work, including night shifts. How can
women do this? We cannot create separate bathrooms and sleeping rooms for them.
It will be too expensive and too complicated. Society is not ready’. Our answer
is that if doctors, nurses can do their job with separate living conditions,
something should be done for fire-fighters and bus drivers too. As you can see
many of our male friends are not against women's equality in theory, but when
it comes to practice and practicalities, they create many obstacles.
Resistance
is not simply coming from society, but it is coming from some of our male
friends within our political movement. There is still a long way to go. We
should not sacrifice our gendered identity and should not tolerate when they
come to us with sexist offers. We also have to remember the obstacles society
and we face all the time. It's not just about equality in leadership or gaining
some specific numbers in more powerful position. New traditions of equality in
the workplace and in society need to be generalized and normalized. If this
does not happen then just having women in symbolic positions, like the one I
have now, will not be enough for any real, meaningful and permanent equality
and freedom.
NA,LT: How do you evaluate the latest
situation in Diyarbakir and in the region in general?
GK: As you already know,
we have been going through a very difficult time with war and atrocities
recently, following a more hopeful time starting with the peace letter of Mr.
Abdullah Õcalan during the Newroz celebrations in 2013. We were hoping for true
negotiations, reconciliation and democratization in Turkey. However, due to
many reasons and developments, the ruling AKP government decided not to pursue a democratic solution to the Kurdish
issue and waged another war on Kurds on all fronts, including our city
Diyarbakir, other neighbouring cities and
towns as well as Rojava. We have lost thousands of people, many of whom are
innocent civilians, young children and women. Our cities and towns have almost been
invaded and many districts were completely destroyed with all houses
demolished, and the infrastructure destroyed. As if all this was not enough, we, as co-mayors are also facing judicial injustices. 22
of our co-mayors were arrested and 31 others were dismissed from office without
any concrete legal grounds. Among them, 17 are female co-mayors. Despite all
the difficulties and obstacles, we are trying to continue our municipal
services on the one hand and show solidarity with the people affected by the
clashes on the other hand. I hope the western world breaks
its silence and puts more pressure on Turkey and the ruling AKP so that the
government will shift towards negotiation for a peaceful solution.
I cannot say that international bodies, organizations and the media have
been sensitive and attentive enough to the problems we are facing. However, as
we know from past experiences, international campaigns and solidarity work is
crucial in stopping atrocities and clashes. I hope the western world breaks its
silence and puts more pressure on Turkey and the ruling AKP so that the
government will shift towards negotiation for a peaceful solution of the
problems.
NA,LT: How did
the more recent wave of crack down and clashes influence your work and struggle
for greater gender-based equality and justice?
GK: I think Kurdish women are having a
more difficult time now than at any other time in the last three decades. The
state’s military operations in the Kurdish regions during the last year was no
longer limited to rural areas. They have destroyed all city life and put a huge
burden on people’s shoulders, especially on women. The Turkish Human Rights
Organisation has published a report about what has happened between 16 August
2015 and 18 March 2016 in 7 cities and 22 towns in the Kurdish regions.
According to this report, a total of 1 million and 642 thousand people were
affected by the state’s operations and curfews. 320 people have lost their
lives (72 children and 62 women). Tens of thousands of houses were destroyed.
At least 250 thousand people are homeless now, because of the destruction of
their houses. Women and children have been especially affected by this damage.
Most of them have been living in uncivilized conditions in tents without water
and electricity for months. They cannot find enough food and clean water to
keep them alive. They don’t have access to any health system. Although women
have tried to protect themselves and their children from illnesses, the rates
of premature birth, neonatal deaths, stillbirth, and child deaths have all
increased. Children are traumatised and most have lost their normal lives
and trust. I think Kurdish women are having a more
difficult time now than at any other time in the last three decades.
During the
military operations, the death of 62 women illustrates how women have been used
as easy targets by the state. In Silopi, the 57 year old Taybet Inan was killed
by state forces but her body was left on the street for 7 days, because snipers
targeted anyone who tried to remove her body. This shows how the state uses
women’s bodies as part of its politics and sees women and their actions as
dangerous. It is an important proof that the masculine state hates women.
In the
Kurdish women’s movement, we have tried to help our people. We continue our
education programmes and close connections with women. We are organizing to
help people with their daily needs. We try to limit the effects of trauma among
women and children. Despite the relentless war by the state against our people,
women have not surrendered. They continue to resist in many ways. Many of our
friends and political activists have been killed, including Asya Yuksel (the
spokesperson for the Cizre Women’s Council), Seve Demir (the Women’s Rights
representative for Silopi), Fatma Uyar and Pakize Nayır. These women did not
leave their towns, cities, but continued to help their people despite knowing
their lives were in danger.
Because of
the war conditions and other urgent priorities, we are focusing less on
violence against women within families. We are not ignoring this important
issue, but most of our workers have to deal with other problems at the moment.
This provides important evidence of yet another way that war and conflict
increases violence against women, especially within families and on the street.
I hope the war conditions will not continue – this would put women’s rights in
further danger and even put us back to the old days. I hope this difficult time
will end soon and will even help us to move the Kurdish
women’s movement one more step further on, as we managed in the 1980s and
1990s.
NA,LT:
Did you expect the latest military
coup? How is the failed coup and its aftermath affecting Kurdish women and people
in general?
GK: As I mentioned at the beginning of our
interview, myself and many other Kurds have directly suffered as a result of
previous military coups in Turkey. I was taken to the infamous Diyarbakir
prison following the military coup (12 September 1980). I know very well the
bad effects of a military coup. There has always been the possibility of a
military coup in Turkey. For that reason, the recent military coup was no
surprise to me. I am very angry that no proper measures were taken to stop this
coup. As a mayor of Diyarbakir, I have responsibilities for my people. I worry
that this will affect our city and our people negatively. This is what always
happened during and after the previous military coups. If I go back to that
evening, on 15 July 2016, we first tried to work out if there were any street
clashes and conflict happening in our city. The leader of the HDP, Mr Selahattin
Demirtaş, was in Diyarbakir that evening. I visited him and
talked to him about the coup and its possible results. The HDP made a strong
official statement straight away and made their position very clear: they were
totally against any military coup. The HDP made a
strong official statement straight away and made their position very clear:
they were totally against any military coup. We anxiously followed all
developments that evening and afterwards, just like many other Kurdish people
and HDP members.
Looking at the results: we can see that the high
ranking military generals and personnel who carried out a very brutal war
against Kurdish people were directly involved in this military coup. This shows
that the war in Kurdistan and the level of democracy in Turkey are directly
connected with one another. Sadly we can see that these generals, who have
carried out crimes against Kurds and violated all human rights in Kurdistan,
are not blamed for this reason. They are only blamed for a coup attempt,
carried out against democracy. But we should know that the war in Kurdistan and
the coup mentality are interconnected. If the crimes and war in the country
continue, especially what we have witnessed against Kurds in the last two
years, there will be always a strong possibility that entrenched military
ideologues will continue to attempt coups, as they try to control power. War in
Kurdistan increases the military mentality and opens a way for anti-democratic
actions in the country. With no shame, the generals who organised the coup, are
claiming the significant role they played in the war against Kurds as part of
their defense. They try to justify themselves by proclaiming what big Turkish
nationalists they are. I am quite sure that the war against Kurds in the last
two years, which was led by the AKP (Justice and Development Party) government,
was planned and carried out by these military generals and police chiefs. We
understand exactly how well these generals and police chiefs understand
democracy. However, even after the coup, the AKP government has not shown any
clear sign that they are going to stop the war against Kurds. If the AKP is
really keen on democracy and is a true champion of democratic values, they
could learn lessons from the latest military coup and adopt democratic
solutions to the Kurdish issue. We do not yet know what kind of strategy will
now be followed by Erdoğan, the Turkish
president, concerning the Kurdish issue. After the coup Erdoğan and the AKP have started a dialogue with most of the opposition
political parties. However, since the HDP and Kurds are not included in this
dialogue, this has created suspicions that a democratic solution may not be the
priority for the Erdoğan and his government. War in
Kurdistan increases the military mentality and opens a way for anti-democratic
actions in the country.
When I look at the reaction of the Kurdish people
after the coup, I can say that especially Kurdish women and other leftist women’s
organizations in Turkey have organized demonstrations and rallies with the
slogan: ‘No to Coup, Yes to Radical Democracy’. In these
demonstrations, tens of thousands of women have taken a strong stance against
any military coup. But they have also made it clear and demonstrated that they
are against authoritarian, sexist and militarist rules and structures. As I
have said throughout this interview, women’s movements have always
been critical of the divisive, unequal and sexist slogans and policies of the
government. After this military coup, the government may use this as an excuse
to strengthen their sexist, militarist and anti-democratic policies further. We
face this danger now. Women’s movements are aware of this danger
and for that reason keep advocating for societal and gender equality at all
levels. We see this as the main starting point for all democratic values and
practices. Without this we cannot talk about democracy: it can only be paying
lip service while hiding their true agenda. Crucially, to be against the coup
does not mean we have to agree with the government’s policies. We are
continuing our work and struggle with a clear understanding of the connections
between government policies, practices and military coups.