Fears for Kurd officials in Turkey
Signs of the conflict which has scarred the south-east
By Chris Morris in Istanbul
Leaders of the pro-Kurdish People's Democracy Party (Hadep) in Turkey
say they are
extremely concerned about the safety of two party officials who went
missing a week ago.
The two men, Serdar Tanif and Ebubekir Deniz, were last seen when they
were summoned to a
camp run by the security forces in the south-eastern town of Silopi.
They had just opened a new branch office there for Hadep.
Even before it opened, the men said they had been threatened by the
local security
forces.
Hadep is by far the most popular party in the mainly-Kurdish south-east of the country.
But many members of the security forces regard it as the political wing
of the Kurdish rebel
movement, the PKK.
Mr Tanif and Mr Deniz were ordered to go to the local gendarmerie camp on 25 January.
Eyewitnesses confirm that they went inside, but they have not been seen since.
Police shootings
After Hadep officials complained to the Interior Ministry, the gendarmes
in Silopi said the two
men were not under arrest.
They had, the gendarmes said, left the camp after half an hour.
Hadep believes the two men have been abducted or worse, and the party
holds the
gendarmerie responsible for their safety.
Unexplained disappearances used to be all too frequent in the south-east,
but an incident like
this has not occurred for some time.
Mr Tanif and Mr Deniz disappeared the day after six police officers
were shot dead in the
nearby city of Diyarbakir.
Now Hadep says that there may be a deliberate attempt to destabilise
the
south-east, which has been enjoying its most peaceful period for many
years.

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The
Kurdistan Observer
www.kurdistanobserver.com