Thousands commemorate in Roboski – and demand justice

 By bianet:

Loved one remembered - one year after the brutal massacre, photo - bianet

Loved one remembered – one year after the brutal massacre, photo – bianet

Thousands of demonstrators assembled in Roboski village this morning, commemorating the death of 34 civilians after a Turkish military air strike exactly one year ago.

Today marked the anniversary of the Roboski Massacre – the killing by air strike of 34 Kurdish civilians from Roboski and Bujeh villages. Turkish state officials claim the killings were caused by false intelligence reports provided by the U.S. Army, an argument that has created controversy in Turkey.

Turkish police tightened security on the route to Roboski, controlling human movement in and out of the village with barricades. Last night several vehicles heading to Sirnak province were halted by the police for vehicle license checks. Many individuals said they were ID-ed by the police in downtown Sirnak.

Several delegations arrived at Roboski this morning including Peace and Democracy Party co-chairs Selahattin Demirtaş and Gültan Kışanak, Democratic Society Party co-chairs Ahmet Türk and Aysel Tuğluk, deputies from Peace and Democracy Party, MAZLUMDER Association, Dersim Associations’ Federation, Peace Parliament.

Democratic Congress of Peoples also attended the ceremony with Sebahat Tuncel, Ertuğrul Kürkçü, Nursel Aydoğan, Rıdvan Turan, Garo Paylan, Ferhat Tunç and Gençay Gürsoy. Delegations were received by family members who lost their beloved ones in the Roboski killings.

According to Firat News Agency, the ceremony began at 10 am.

“Those who suffered took the front line for the freedom struggle. Kurdish people are the source of stability and instability, in Turkey and in the Middle East. If Kurds are emancipated, the region will be so too. Kurdish people will always respond to the policies based on assimilation and denial,” Ahmet Türk, co-chair of Democratic Society Party, said.

Peace and Democracy Party co-chair Demirtaş claimed that the air strike order that killed 34 civilians was made by PM Erdogan. “The Turkish Army is aware of this order.”

Demirtaş said PM Erdogan was given a report saying that a high rank PKK officer was among 34 civilians. “But the report said the rest of the people were civilians.”

Demirtaş complained that PM Erdogan might never be held accountable for the air strike order in the foreseeable future. “No Turkish prosecutor will take this to court. Why? Because whoever died in that massacre were not Turks. Kurds were killed there. You can’t order an air strike in western part of Turkey. Do you do this because there is no Kurdistan? Kurds should have their Kurdistan. No matter independent, federal or autonomous. If there is a Kurdistan, then justice for Roboski can be found.”

Following the speeches, many demonstrators, including Diyarbakir province mayor Osman Baydemir headed to the village mosque for Juma prayer.

In several south-eastern Kurdish districts–Derik, Nusaybin, Kızıltepe, Silvan, Bismil, Malazgirt, Şırnak, Cizre, Silopi, İdil, Uludere and Beytüşşebap–local businesses pulled down their shutters to commemorate the killings.

This article has been lightly edited.

There are no comments yet. Be the first and leave a response!

Leave a Reply

Wanting to leave an <em>phasis on your comment?

Trackback URL https://kurdistantribune.com/thousands-commemorate-roboski-demand-justice/trackback/