Turkey jails mayors in southeast over ‘self-rule’ claims

Istanbul: A Turkish court today remanded in custody three mayors from the Kurdish-dominated southeast on charges of seeking to destroy national unity by allegedly supporting calls for regional self-rule, reports said.

The investigation comes as Turkey carries out its biggest operation in years against Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) militants who have responded by tearing up a 2013 ceasefire and staging daily attacks against the security forces.

Those placed under arrest include the co-mayors of the central Sur district of the region’s biggest city Diyarbakir, Seyid Narin and Fatma Sik Barut, the official Anatolia news agency reported.

It is common in Kurdish regions of Turkey for posts to be shared between a man and a woman to promote gender equality.

Also remanded in custody by the Diyarbakir court was Yuksel Bodakci, the mayor of the town of Silvan in the Diyarbakir region, as well as two other municipal officials from Sur.

Anatolia said they had been charged with seeking “to break up the unity of the state and integrity of the country”. It is not clear when the trial will start.

All of them are members of the Democratic Regions Party (DBP), which has close ties to Turkey’s main pro-Kurdish political force the Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP).

Turkish media reports said they had been initially detained on Wednesday as part of an investigation into moves by some Kurdish-dominated regions in Turkey to declare “self rule” since the latest crisis took hold.

Reports said that so-called people’s assemblies in districts including Silopi and Cizre in Sirnak province had declared self-rule and would no longer recognise state institutions.

Tensions are riding high in Turkey’s southeast as the military presses on with its campaign against PKK militants both within the country and in their strongholds in northern Iraq.

According to figures published Saturday by the state-run Anatolia news agency, 812 PKK militants have been killed in the campaign while 56 members of the Turkish security forces have lost their lives.

It is not possible to independently verify the death toll for PKK militants. Turkish officials have vehemently denied claims that civilians have also been targeted.