Kiki po starom, gomila propagande i floskula.
Turska je itekako ponudila Kurdima, ali su Kurdi izradili dogovor. Dogovor je bio o izlasku vojnih jedinica iz Turske, dakle terorista po svim međunarodnim normama, i njihov odlazak u Irak. Kurdi nisu ispoštovali dogovor, jer su se polakomili i očekivali preljevanje rata u Tursku. Naravno, Turska odgovorila kao i svaka država. Pokušajte zamisliti sličan scenarij sa Meksikancima i USA.
Nemojmo se praviti ludi.
Evo kako je to izgledalo 2013, daleko od ništa:
The word “Kurdish” is no longer always equivalent to the word “terrorist”. A Kurdish press now exists. Kurdish institutes have been created in universities, and learning Kurdish language at school is being suggested. Publishing books in Kurdish no longer gets you sent to jail. The fourth political force in Turkey gathers Kurdish, progressive Turks and representatives of ethnic or social minorities like the LGBT movement. The “global war” seems relegated to the dark days of the past. “The Kurdish movement, and more particularly the women's movement, are helping the democratisation of Turkey”, states Murad Akincilar. This progress is rooted in a regional context that is in full reconstruction.
I naravno, koliko nema smisla priča o velikom Kurdistanu kao državi, Kurdi su itekako svjesni:
In this context, the idea of a Great Kurdistan is back on the agenda though not necessarily as an independent country or a national state assures Murad Akincilar. “The PKK is moving away from the idea of wanting to create a state against another state. The Kurds in Turkey do not support the idea that their right to self-determination means a new notional state. Their Great Kurdistan is cultural, historical, so that it will allow the construction of a federation of communities in the region.” The rights claimed by the Kurdish movement are claimed in the name of all the people in the area and the political project is moving towards a confederation of communities based on “multi-cultural democracy”.