[Congressional Record Volume 144, Number 141 (Friday, October 9, 1998)]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Page E2007]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
ANKARA'S DECISION TO SENTENCE LEYLA ZANA A BLATANT VIOLATION OF FREEDOM
OF EXPRESSION
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HON. ELIZABETH FURSE
of oregon
in the house of representatives
Thursday, October 8, 1998
Ms. FURSE. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to express my indignation over
the decision of the Turkish government to sentence Leyla Zana, the
Kurdish parliamentarian who is currently serving a 15-year sentence, to
2 additional years in prison as a blatant violation of the freedom of
expression and an insult to her supporters worldwide.
This time, the Turkish authorities charge that Leyla Zana broke the
law in a letter she wrote to the People Democracy Party (HADEP) to urge
them to be forthcoming, diligent, decisive and to push for individual
and collective freedoms. The fact that Leyla Zana has been charged with
inciting racial hatred reveals that Turkey is a racist state and
continues to deny the Kurds a voice in the state.
As my colleagues know, Leyla Zana is the first Kurdish woman every
elected to the Turkish parliament. She won her office with more than 84
percent of the vote in her district and brought the Turkish Grand
National Assembly a keen interest for human rights and a conviction
that the Turkish war against the Kurds must come to an end. Last year,
153 Members of this body joined together and signed a letter to
President Bill Clinton urging him to raise Leyla Zana's case with the
Turkish authorities and seek her immediate and unconditional release
from prison.
Leyla Zana was kept in custody from March 5, 1994, until December 7,
1994 without a conviction. On December 8, 1994, the Ankara State
Security Court sentenced her and five other Kurdish parliamentarians to
various years in prison. Leyla Zana was accused of making a treasonous
speech in Washington, DC., other speeches elsewhere, and wearing a
scarf that bore the Kurdish colors of green, red, and yellow. This year
marks her fifth year behind the bars.
Today, in Turkish Kurdistan, 40,000 people have lost their lives.
More than 3,000 Kurdish villages have been destroyed. Over 3 million
residents have become destitute refugees. Despite several unilateral
cease-fires by the Kurdish side, the Turkish army continues to pursue
policies of hatred, torture and murder, and genocide of the Kurdish
people.
Mr. Speaker, as I finish my sixth year in office as a Member of the
United States Congress, I find it outrageous that the government of
Turkey, after so much outcry, after so much petitioning and after so
much publicity would dare to punish her again incensing her friends and
supporters all over the world. There is only one word that comes to my
mind and it is, fear, Mr. Speaker. The government of Turkey is afraid
of Leyla Zana and it thinks it can lock her away forever. That was the
story of those who locked Nelson Mandela. The longest nights, Mr.
Speaker, give way to bright dawns. Mr. Mandela is a public servant now.
And the world is grateful.
People like Leyla Zana who utter the words of reconciliation and
accommodation need to be embraced, validated, and freed. I urge the
government of Turkey to set aside its conviction of Leyla Zana and free
her immediately, and I urge my colleagues and government to condemn her
conviction and make her release a priority.
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