In September and early October, raids targeting HDP politicians were carried out over accusations of incitement to violence for their alleged role in 2014 protests ignited by what is seen by many as the Turkish government’s tacit approval of the Kobane siege in 2014 when ISIS militants laid a prolonged siege to a Kurdish town in northern Syria.
After the raids, a court arrested Ayhan Bilgen, a former co-mayor from the HDP along with 16 other party officials.
“What ushered in the downfall of ISIS was their defeat at Kobani. The fact that ISIS was defeated in the Middle East saddens the AKP [Justice and Development Party] the most,” Demirtas said.
Syrian Kurdish armed groups such as the People’s Protection Units (YPG) played a crucial role in the coalition task force set up to defeat ISIS.
“The AKP and its collaborators, who invested heavily in extremist factions in the Middle East, suffered a strategic defeat. This is the source of the AKP’s unmitigated anger over the Kobane siege, and since that day, they have wanted to take revenge on the Kurds under the pretext of Kobani,” Demirtas said.
European bodies and actors such as Russia have long accused Ankara of pursuing imperialist ambitions in the region and backing radical groups that commit war crimes in Syria’s protracted civil war.
Turkey has established direct control over swathes of land in northern Syria through successive offensives against the YPG since 2018. The operations received strong backing from the Turkish people and were used to stoke a nationalist fervor in the country that helped expand an ongoing crackdown on pro-Kurdish groups, according to observers.
“Everyone should know, in jail or out: We will resist to such a great extent that these plots will purge the AKP-MHP [Nationalist Movement Party] alliance instead of the HDP and will send them into the abyss,” Demirtas said in reference to the police raids.
When asked about his views on the current state of the Turkish judiciary considering the fact that the investigation launched into the Kobane protests is a duplicate of a case in which no criminal charges were pressed, Demirtas said: “The judiciary in Turkey has never been independent, impartial or just. But it has never been such a mess, either. The judiciary as an institution is in ruins. It is useless to expect justice from this or that court in a situation like this.”
Expressing hope for a new government that will include the HDP, to be formed after elections, the jailed leader noted that only then can democratic reforms be comprehensively implemented to fix the issue.
“It is not just us. Millions have become victims of the judiciary. Without a change in government and the law, no one will receive justice,” Demirtas said and branded the recent raids as “not just a mere violation of the law but a serious crime committed in a bid to design the politics in the country.”
“We will bring those who are committing these crimes to justice,” he added.
Demirtas and Figen Yuksekdag, former co-chairs of the HDP, have been in jail on terror charges since November 2016. The AKP government has long accused the HDP of having ties to the PKK.
A report by the European Commission (EC) released in October underlined that serious backsliding continued this year in Turkey’s judicial system, with concerns over the systemic lack of independence of the judiciary.
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