KURD-A Documentation March 2, 1995 The ERNK European Representation issued the following statement concerning Germany's banning of Kurdish institutions: Today, several Kurdish institutions, including the Kurdistan Information Bureau, in various German cities were raided, searched, and banned by the police and state security forces. Materials in the offices were seized. The reason for the banning, according to police, were the attacks on Turkish travel agencies which occurred over the past few days, and that this action is a retaliation. In reality, this attack on Kurdish institutions is a continuation of a joint campaign by the German and Turkish governments against the national liberation struggle in Kurdistan. It is the result of the logic of banning, denial, and destruction. We would like to stress to the public that we were not in any way connected to the attacks on the Turkish travel agencies. We would like to stress that such accusations are being utilized as a means of justifying these bans and raids. In the name of the Kurdish people, we strongly condemn this action of the German government. The following is a statement by the Kurdistan Information Bureau, which has just been banned in Germany: Today, in the early morning, the Kurdistan Information Bureau in Cologne and Berlin as well as other institutions in Bavaria and North Rhein-Westphalia were search and banned by the German police on the orders of interior minister Kanther. During the police raids, publications, computers, files, and even the kitchen sink were taken away. The Kurdistan Information Bureau has followed the goal of publishing information regarding the situation in Kurdistan, but also about the persecution and criminalization of Kurds in Germany. Representatives of the Kurdistan Information Bureau across Germany have consistently argued for an end to the war in Kurdistan during their consultations with local, state, and federal officials. During the "International Kurdistan Conference" in Berlin on February 24-26, 1995, the Kurdistan Information Bureau once again attempted to express their desire that a peaceful solution to the Kurdistan conflict be found. The means employed by Germany to fight against politically- active Kurds increasingly resemble those used by the Turkish state. It was exactly one year ago that Turkey expelled the Democracy Party (DEP) MPs from the parliament in a putsch-like manner and arrested them. The Turkish government's aim in doing this was to prevent the MPs from carrying out their diplomatic and political work. During several foreign visits, these Kurdish MPs called on their European colleagues, especially the Germans, to force Turkey to respect human rights in Kurdistan. Today's banning of the Kurdistan Information Bureau is no coincidence. The interior minister's assertion that "the institutions were connected with the attacks of the last few days" and that they are the "successors of outlawed organizations" are identical to the reasons given by the State Security Court (DGM) for banning the DEP. The focus of the work carried out most recently by the Kurdistan Information Bureau was to inform the public about the creation of the Kurdish Exile Parliament and the upcoming Newroz festivities in Kurdistan and Germany. The exile parliament, when it is formed, will be responsible for representing the diplomatic and political interests of the Kurdish people living in exile and for seeking a political solution to the Kurdistan conflict. The resonance to this project from some European states has been very positive and many states have expressed their support for it. As in the past, Germany is not prepared to soften its hard- line politics with respect to the Kurds. The Bonn interior ministry's banning of Kurdish institutions in November 1993 has not stopped the Kurdish people from striving for their legitimate right to self-determination, neither dispersed abroad nor in Kurdistan. Developments, particularly the present ones, show that Germany wishes to remain Turkey's partner in the war against the Kurdish people. But the reality of 10 years of liberation struggle has made one thing clear: Nothing can defeat it. With its policies of the criminalization and persecution of Kurds living here, Germany is supporting the terrorist Turkish state, stirring up hatred between peoples, and worsening the war of destruction against our people. If Germany does not want this war, then why has it not declared its willingness to accept the countless proposals from the Kurds to act as a mediator between the two warring sides? Why can't Germany accept the exile parliament as a possibility for dialogue? The Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) has for years been making concrete proposals to end the internationally-sponsored special war against the Kurdish people. The General Secretary of the PKK, Abdullah Ocalan, in his letter of last November, called on Germany to work for peace in Kurdistan and Turkey. Why has there never been an answer to this letter? Cologne - March 2, 1995