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THE STANS
Turkey eyes new police powers after pro-Kurdish protests
by Staff Writers
Istanbul (AFP) Oct 15, 2014


Turkey Kurdish party to meet top rebels as deadline passes
Istanbul (AFP) Oct 15, 2014 - Turkey's main pro-Kurdish party said Wednesday it will hold talks with Iraq-based armed Kurdish rebels and jailed militant leader Abdullah Ocalan as a deadline passed for the Turkish government to come up with a roadmap for the peace process.

The Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), which has waged a three-decade insurgency for Kurdish self-rule in the southeast, had given the government until Wednesday to show it is serious about peace.

Kurds are furious that Turkey has not assisted Kurdish fighters battling Islamic State (IS) militants for the Syrian town of Kobane and even blocked them from crossing into Syria.

The PKK has threatened to resume a campaign of violence if there is no roadmap for talks. Tensions have risen further after the Turkish military bombed PKK targets in Turkey on Monday.

The PKK said those strikes were a "breach of the ceasfire" that has largely held since March 2013.

The deadline passed Wednesday afternoon without a major statement from the PKK or the government about the progress of the peace process.

But indicating that the coming days would be crucial, the pro-Kurdish People's Democratic Party (HDP) said a delegation of its MPs would hold talks at the weekend with armed PKK rebels at their base in the Kandil Mountains in Iraq.

The delegation -- consisting of MPs Idris Baluken, Pervin Buldan and Sirri Sureyya Onder -- would then meet Ocalan himself for talks on his prison island of Imrali on the Marmara Sea on October 21.

Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, who on Tuesday said the government was committed to the search for peace, was to chair a new government meeting on the process later Wednesday, an official from his office said.

At least 34 people were killed last week in several nights of violent pro-Kurdish protests across Turkey, some of the worst rioting seen in the country in years.

At least 40,000 people have been killed since the PKK began the armed rebellion in 1984 with the aim of winning self-rule for Turkey's Kurds who make up 15-20 percent of the population.

The Turkish government on Wednesday presented a bill granting greater powers to the security forces after deadly pro-Kurdish protests, as the opposition accused the authorities of creating a "police state".

The "homeland security reform" bill was submitted to parliament's justice commission by the ruling Islamic-rooted Justice and Development Party (AKP), a parliamentary source told AFP.

Deputy Prime Minister Bulent Arinc said the legislation would grant the police "the best tools" to counter what he described as "vandalism" on the streets.

At least 34 people were killed and 360 wounded, including police, earlier this month when Kurds took to streets over Turkey's lack of support for the mainly-Kurdish Syrian border town of Kobane, which is under attack from Islamic State (IS) jihadists.

Over 1,000 people were detained for their involvement in the protests which caused damage to hundreds of public buildings.

"We cannot tie the hands of our police in the face of such barbarism," Arinc said.

"If powers given to our police are not enough to counter the killings, vandalism and threats to the safety of our citizens, we need to equip them with the best tools they need," he said.

- 'Gasoline on a fire' -

The bill also calls for stricter punishment for offenders damaging public property, wearing masks to conceal their identity, as well as resisting the police, Turkish media reported.

It allows the authorities to hold protesters charged with rioting in pre-trial detention right up until the end of their trials.

Police will have the power to detain those "who are likely to stage a protest or engage in a violent act" in what the government calls " pre-emptive detention."

"Reasonable doubt" will justify a police search as opposed to the current "strong suspicion based on concrete evidence."

Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu on Tuesday bluntly warned the protesters against destroying water cannon trucks, a favourite tool of Turkish police in dispersing protests.

"We will buy five or 10 TOMAs for each TOMA destroyed," using the Turkish acronym for the water cannon trucks.

Opposition lawmakers denounced the new measures, saying they would turn Turkey into a police state.

"This is like throwing gasoline on a fire... at a time when so many children are being killed by police on the streets," said pro-Kurdish lawmaker Idris Baluken of the People's Democratic Party (HDP).

"From now on, the police will resort to not only using shields but also guns, with an authority to kill."

Ozcan Yeniceri, an MP from Nationalist Action Party (MHP) added: "Police will do whatever they want, as if martial law has been imposed. Turkey will become a police state."

But Numan Kurtulmus, another deputy prime minister, brushed off the criticism on Wednesday.

"After taking so many decisive steps towards democracy for years, Turkey cannot take any steps toward becoming a police state again," he said.

A brutal police crackdown on anti-government protests in May-June 2013 left eight people dead and thousands injured.

The heavy-handed tactics used by Turkish police, who frequently resort to tear gas and water cannon, have drawn widespread criticism from rights groups at home and abroad.

At the height of the 2013 unrest, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, then prime minister, hailed Turkey's 340,000-strong police force and said they had displayed "legendary heroism" in quelling weeks of anti-government protests.

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