Erdogan ally floats releasing jailed pro-Kurdish leader Demirtas

Update Erdogan ally floats releasing jailed pro-Kurdish leader Demirtas
Turkish nationalist leader Devlet Bahceli said on Tuesday it “would be beneficial” to release from prison former pro-Kurdish party leader Selahattin Demirtas, in a rare signal of support by an influential figure long hostile to Kurdish political demands. (AFP//File)
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Erdogan ally floats releasing jailed pro-Kurdish leader Demirtas

Erdogan ally floats releasing jailed pro-Kurdish leader Demirtas
  • ECHR has twice ruled that Demirtas’s rights were violated and called for his immediate release.
  • Bahceli said: “The legal path has been completed. His release would be beneficial for Turkiye“

ANKARA: Turkish nationalist leader Devlet Bahceli said on Tuesday it “would be beneficial” to release from prison former pro-Kurdish party leader Selahattin Demirtas, in a rare signal of support by an influential figure long hostile to Kurdish political demands.
The surprise comment before reporters outside parliament came a year after Bahceli — a close ally of President Tayyip Erdogan who has in the past pushed him toward major policy shifts — urged the start of a peace process with the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK).
PKK militants have since agreed to disarm and dissolve, opening a rare window for Turkiye to address decades-long grievances among its large Kurdish minority, which has called for greater democratic rights and protections and helped fuel Demirtas’s surging popularity before his 2016 jailing.
Demirtas was detained in November 2016 on terrorism-related charges he denies. In May 2024, a court convicted him over the deadly 2014 protests and sentenced him to more than 40 years in prison; he also received a separate 2-year sentence in 2021 for insulting Erdogan.
The European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) has twice ruled that Demirtas’s rights were violated and called for his immediate release. Ankara’s final appeal was rejected on Monday.
Asked about the court’s decision, Bahceli said: “The legal path has been completed. His release would be beneficial for Turkiye.”
Demirtas had welcomed a recent ECHR ruling on his case as “important and legally binding” and, in a handwritten post on X, urged unity: “This bond of brotherhood will be strengthened by the work we undertake to ensure freedom, justice and peace.”
It was unclear how the government might respond.
In an X post, Vice President Cevdet Yilmaz said he supported the alliance between Bahceli’s Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) and the ruling AK Party, but did not refer specifically to the comments on Demirtas.

PRO-KURDISH PARTY TARGETED FOR YEARS
The opposition pro-Kurdish DEM Party — known as HDP when Demirtas led it — remains parliament’s third-largest bloc and in recent months has cooperated with a government-led peace commission related to the PKK, signalling readiness to support its steps.
Bahceli’s MHP has historically been the fiercest opponent of broader Kurdish rights agendas and has long vilified Kurdish-rooted political groups — making Tuesday’s comment especially striking as Ankara edges toward potential reforms.
Tuncer Bakirhan, DEM’s co-head, said afterward that not only Demirtas but all “political prisoners” should be released as part of a democratic peace process.
The pro-Kurdish movement has been targeted for years in a sweeping crackdown in which thousands of its officials and members have been jailed and many lawmakers and elected mayors removed from office.
As the PKK peace process has progressed over the last year, a new wave of arrests and investigations has targeted the main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP).
“Bahceli’s remarks mark a striking U-turn,” said Berk Esen, professor of political science at Sabanci University.
“Until recently, the ruling alliance accused the opposition of wanting to free Demirtas and insisted he remain in jail, which underscores how political this case has always been.”
But he added that Bahceli’s comment does not mark “a broader political liberalization or democratization,” given that both the CHP and Kurdish political movement face continued legal pressure.


UN secretary-general warns that war in Sudan is ‘spiraling out of control’

UN secretary-general warns that war in Sudan is ‘spiraling out of control’
Updated 04 November 2025

UN secretary-general warns that war in Sudan is ‘spiraling out of control’

UN secretary-general warns that war in Sudan is ‘spiraling out of control’
  • UN chief offers stark warning about El-Fasher and calls for an immediate ceasefire in the two-year conflict

DUBAI: The United Nations secretary-general warned Tuesday that the war in Sudan is “spiraling out of control” after a paramilitary force seized the Darfur city of El-Fasher.

Speaking at a UN summit in Qatar, Antonio Guterres offered a stark warning about El-Fasher and called for an immediate ceasefire in the two-year conflict that’s become one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises.

“Hundreds of thousands of civilians are trapped by this siege,” Guterres said. “People are dying of malnutrition, disease and violence. And we are hearing continued reports of violations of international humanitarian law and human rights.”

He added that there also were “credible reports of widespread executions since the Rapid Support Forces entered the city.”

UN officials have warned of a rampage by the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces after it took over the city of El-Fasher, reportedly killing more than 450 people in a hospital and carrying out ethnically targeted killings of civilians and sexual assaults.

The RSF has denied committing atrocities, but testimonies from those fleeing, online videos and satellite images offer an apocalyptic vision of the aftermath of their attack. The full scope of the violence remains unclear because communications are poor in the region.

The RSF besieged El-Fasher for 18 months, cutting off much of the food and other supplies needed by tens of thousands of people. Last week, the paramilitary group seized the city.

Asked if he thought there was a role for international peacekeepers in Sudan, Guterres said it was important to “gather all the international community and all those that have leverage in relation to Sudan to stop the fighting.”

“One thing that is essential to stop the fighting is to make sure that no more weapons come into Sudan,” he said. “We need to create mechanisms of accountability because the crimes that are being committed are so horrendous.”

The war between the RSF and the Sudanese military has been tearing apart Sudan since April 2023. More than 40,000 people have been killed, according to UN figures, but aid groups say the true death toll could be many times higher. The fighting has driven more than 14 million people from their homes and fueled disease outbreaks. Meanwhile, two regions of war-torn Sudan are enduring a famine that is at risk of spreading.

“It is clear that we need a ceasefire in Sudan,” Guterres said. “We need to stop this carnage that is absolutely intolerable.”