Former Turkish president Abdullah Gul blames HDP closure case

Former Turkish president Abdullah Gul slammed the closure case against the pro-Kurdish Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP) and the decision that stripped Omer Faruk Gergerlioglu of his parliamentary seat, opposition Karar newspaper reported on Thursday.

Prosecutors applied to Turkey’s Constitutional Court to shutter the HDP on Wednesday, citing the party’s alleged links to the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) and its failure to condemn terrorism. Turkey’s government says the HDP supports the PKK, which is an autonomy-seeking armed group labelled as terrorist by the United States and the European Union, Ahval reported.

“I find it very wrong,” remarked the former president, adding that "The move will impose a burden on Turkish government which recently promised to introduce civic reforms”.

Previous experience has shown that party closures and lifting of immunities promoted terrorist organizations. Terrorism can only be challenged by strengthening democracy and restoring human rights, Gul said.

A former member of the Turkish Parliament (2011 to 2015), Aykan Erdemir suggested that the real reason behind the Erdogan government’s panicked legal assault on Gergerlioglu is the embarrassment he has caused as a conservative Sunni Muslim of Turkish ethnicity whose presence in the ranks of the pro-Kurdish and pro-secular HDP belies Erdogan's claims that the party is anti- Turkish and anti-Muslim.

Reporter's code: 50101

News Code 664

Tags

Your Comment

You are replying to: .
captcha