So this week brings me to the current ‘Peace Process’
between the government and the Kurds. I have written nothing here about it
because I am not qualified. I don’t have time to follow all the sources that
would be required to make any intelligent observations. To sum up what I and
everyone else know: Abdullah Ocalan has negotiated a deal where the PKK
withdraw from the borders of Turkey in return for—well, we’re still not sure.
There is vague talk of rights and constitutional reform. At Ocalan’s
recommendation, a committee of ‘Wise People’ has been appointed to tour the
country and research the issue. A long awaited ‘Fourth Judicial Reform’ has
been passed which, in the words of Amnesty International, makes cosmetic
changes ‘to minimize criticism but leave most restrictions on freedom in place.’
What comes down to us ordinary folks is a hope that we know
is naive, but since we are so desperate for it, we cling to it anyway--like a life raft with a hole in it on a hurricane whipped sea. Then when
something happens to confirm our naivete, it is crushing all the more because
we allowed ourselves to be tricked again. Hope! There is so much talk of hope in
the papers and on TV. This is it, they say. This is the end of all the long guerilla war and
century of oppression. Then why last Monday, April 29th, did we get a call from my wife’s
father explaining that, after a secret trial, the men and women who had gone on
hunger strike last Fall were going to be punished?
91 former hunger strikers, some barely recovered from 67
days of no food, were sentenced on charges of insubordination. When the first waves of hunger strikers were being taken away to isolation cells, their fellow prisoners pounded their fists on the walls and doors, and generally put up a fight. The article on bianet.org says 'they are being punished for ‘participating in the strike,
protesting being handcuffed, and resistance to strip searches.’ My father-in-law
has been sentenced to 12 days of confinement to a cell, 5 months of no
communication, and 17 months of no visitations. I had to reread that sentence
several times before I was sure I understood it. Surely I was missing a comma
or some nuance of Turkish. It could not possible be a year and half! 17 MONTHS!
And all appeals have been rejected. 17 MONTHS!
I cannot exaggerate what this is going to do to my family—my
wife, her sisters, her aunts and uncles and grandfather live for Wednesday when
they can go to Silivri and visit the man that has been taken away from them.
Our whole week often revolves around that one day. We don’t speak of his
imprisonment much anymore, but it is the 800 pound gorilla that is always in
every room. The sense of injustice is something I can literally taste in my
mouth. This acidic, nasty taste. I woke up today with tears in my eyes—rage and sorrow and worry for my
wife all rolled into one ugly emotion. The last visitation—and last in every
sense of the word—did not go well. Delal’s dad is having kidney trouble
apparently, his health is not so good. And now there is to be 5 months of
silence with that in our minds.
This day reminds me of the day that we first learned he had
been arrested. The process was the same. Delal was acting odd. I knew something
was wrong but she couldn’t say. A strange, awkward silence followed us like a
ghost. Then the full weight of the terrible news. The day he was arrested she
told me we would be late to meet our friends for a concert. I pressed for a
reason. She said we had to go to Aksaray. Why? No answer. After a lot of
prodding, she told me we had to go to the security bureau at Aksaray. And
finally I learned he had been taken. This time, she told me that her sister
Hilal had talked to her dad on the phone. The hunger strikers were going to be
punished. There would be a month of no visitations. She was strangely moody for
a few days. She smiled, but it was like a light had gone out in her eyes, and
then this morning I read in the paper that the isolation is to last 17 months.
The latest shocking bit of news allows me to step outside of
the situation and look back at the past year and a half. We have been like
rocks, you see, a wall of stone against the raging Lodos winds that rush at
Istanbul from the Marmara Sea. We do not show the day to day wear and tear of
the waves crashing in on us—no crying, no depression or woe-is-us moaning and
groaning—but when you look at these same rocks as they were a year and a half
ago and compare them with today, you see how much has been worn away and you
wonder how much longer they can hold out against the storm before everything
falls apart.
The list of prisoners with
the most severe punishment is as follows:
Celalettin Delibaş 18 months with no
visitations, 4 months prohibition from all social functions.
Kemal Seven—17 months with no visitations,
5 months ban on communications, 12 days of confinement to his cell.
Tuncer Özdoğan, 12 months with no
visitations, 5 months ban on communication, 12 days confinement to his cell and
1 month prohibition from all social functions.
Hüsnü Çetin 14 months with no visitations.
20 days discipline. 4 months ban on communication.
Ahmet Yılmaz 24 months with no visitation,
6 months ban on communication, 25 days confinement to his cell.
3 comments:
I forgot to add:
The list of prisoners with the most severe punishment is as follows:
Celalettin Delibaş 18 months with no visitations, 4 months prohibition from all social functions.
Kemal Seven—17 months with no visitations, 5 months ban on communications, 12 days of confinement to his cell.
Tuncer Özdoğan, 12 months with no visitations, 5 months ban on communication, 12 days confinement to his cell and 1 month prohibition from all social functions.
Hüsnü Çetin 14 months with no visitations. 20 days discipline. 4 months ban on communication.
Ahmet Yılmaz 24 months with no visitation, 6 months ban on communication, 25 days confinement to his cell.
Horrifying and cruel. Tears in my eyes.
I'll make some calls again. Can't imagine...
This is so unbelievably appalling. I am so, so sad for you guys and your family, and so angry on your behalf. If there's anything we can do, let me know.
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