Message of Abant Platform
The people of Turkey and Iraqi Kurdistan should learn from their past mistakes and work for a future of friendship and peace, Arbil Gov. Nevzat Hadi said at a meeting of the Abant Platform in the northern Iraqi city of Arbil yesterday.
"The border between Turkey and Iraq is Iraq's door to Europe, and that door has never been and will never be closed," Turkish Consul General in Mosul Hüseyin Avni Botsali, also attending the Abant Platform's 18th conference on "Searching for Peace and a Future Together." The conference began yesterday in Arbil with the participation of over 200 intellectuals from Turkey and Iraqi Kurdistan.
In his opening remarks, Gov. Hadi underlined that the decision for peace and friendship rested with the people. "This is why we have to be realistic and we should not cause each other to worry. The people of Kurdistan are ready for peace," he said.
At the conference, Salahaddin University President Muhammad Sadik underlined that universities play a critical role in the improvement of science and the use of science for the public good. "But this task is not easy to perform; this is why we are hoping to cooperate more intensively with Turkish universities. This meeting of the Abant Platform will be so important to the joint future of both countries," he said.
Political science professor Mümtaz'er Türköne stated in his opening remarks that the platform had hosted meetings abroad before but that at this meeting the platform members did not feel as if they were in a foreign country.
"We are home; we don't feel like we are in a foreign country. This is due to your hospitality and also because we are the children of the same land. We are the people who find happiness in the same things, we share the same values. This is why we are considering this Abant meeting as the most important one," he said.
"We are all Kurds," Türköne said to emphasize the similarity between the two nations. "For example, I am from Sinop, the northernmost part of Turkey. But I am a Kurd, too. I think like a Kurd, I feel like one and I will die like a Kurd." The academic spoke about Ziya Gökalp, an ethnic Kurd who was a theoretician of Turkish nationalism. Quoting Gökalp's adage, "Turks who do not like Kurds are not Turks and Kurds who do not like Turks are not Kurds," Türköne said, "The political approaches at the state level may be different, but this principle is the measure of the people."
He also recalled the existence of some maps labeling Turkey's Southeast as part of a "Kurdistan," saying that those maps are a dream to some people while a nightmare for others.
"But let's face the reality, the biggest Kurdish city in the world is İstanbul. There are more Kurds there than anywhere. This is why we are partly Kurdish, partly Turkish," he said.
He also spoke about the Abant Platform, saying it stood for democracy, tolerance and dialogue, and was welcome to all sorts of ideas as long as they were in line with the platform's opposition to violence. Speaking about the platform's previous meeting on the Kurdish question, Türköne recalled that it had underlined the importance of education in one's mother tongue, general amnesty for Kurds who are members of the separatist terrorist Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) and further democratization. He said that not only these essentials, but also establishing a good relationship with the Kurdish regional administration of northern Iraq was a crucial element of any solution to the Kurdish question, adding that this was why they were in Arbil for Abant's 18th meeting.
The Kurdish question is not only Turkey's problem, but also a problem for Iraqi Kurds, since the issue has serious effect on the relationship between them and Turkey, he said: "What we want to underline is that the problem is one [belonging to] the state. There is no problem between the Kurdish and Turkish peoples. This is a political problem. We are trying to change our state, and we need your contribution to the solution of this problem."
Islamic thinker Fethullah Gülen also sent a message to the Arbil meeting. In his message, Gülen said, "In the last century, the region has been object of international attention. With no bout, both war and peace are teaching different humane an international relationships and providing serious gains. In addition to the tragedy it brings, perhaps there is also a teaching, maturing aspect to war. But in the end, it is necessary to go back to societal life, in other words, to a process of normalization." (Ayşe Karabat, Arbil)
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