Sakine Cansız

Sakine Cansız (Turkish pronunciation: [saːciˈne dʒanˈsɯz]; Kurdish: Sakîne Cansiz, IPA: [sækinɛ dʒænsɪs]; 1958 9 January 2013) was one of the co-founders of the Kurdistan Workers' Party (or PKK). A Kurdish activist in the 1980s, she was arrested and tortured by Turkish police.[1] A close associate of Abdullah Öcalan and a senior member of the PKK, she was shot dead in Paris, France, on 9 January 2013, with two other female Kurdish activists, Fidan Doğan and Leyla Söylemez.

Sakine Cansız
Born1958
Died9 January 2013 (aged 5455)
Paris, France
Cause of deathExecution-style shooting
CitizenshipTurkey
OccupationKurdish rights advocate
OrganizationKurdistan Workers' Party (PKK)

Early life

Cansız was born around 1958 in Tunceli, a city in eastern Turkey, to an Alevi family[2][3] They were eight siblings[4] and she was the eldest daughter.[5] To primary and secondary school she went in Tunceli. In the secondary school she got influenced by her teacher Yusuf Kenan Deniz, who introduced his class to the Dev-Genç, the Revolutionary Youth Federation of Turkey.[6] She began to hear about Denis Gezmis on the radio and saw posters of him depicted as a hero. There were also other posters that called him names like “terrorist” and “communist on the run”. Gezmis and other members were depicted as criminals or villains and the posters advertised a reward for their capture. That day at recess Sakine and her friends took down the negative posters in hopes that by taking down the posters that none of the people would be found. It was in middle school that she experienced her first rebellion and she learned the importance of secrecy; in other words there were certain topics that can not be discussed whenever or wherever you want.[7] In 1969 her father migrated to Germany.[8]

In 1973 she and her elder brother followed their father to Berlin, Germany.[9] After 11 months in Berlin she returned to Dersim,[4] where she began to study at the Gymnasium[10] and became engaged to Metin.[11] She began to take part in revolutionary activities, which were not endorsed by the family of her fiancée.[12] She fled to Ankara where she first met Abdullah Öcalan,[13] with whom she would work closely.[1] In an interview, she said of this period: "In a sense I abandoned the family. I did not accept that pressure, insisting on revolutionism. That's how I left and went to Ankara. In secret of course."[13]

Revolutionary consciousness

  • While in Germany, Sakine attended an event with her father and everyone was dressed in traditional Kurdish attire. Sakine did not wear traditional clothing and was upset when she realized that everyone else attending the event was wearing traditional clothing. She became so used to feeling like she had to hide her identity that she felt like an outsider from her own society. Upon moving back to Dersim her relationship with her mother became rocky, she was growing up, becoming a young woman while also gaining a revolutionary consciousness and her mother was attempting to stop all of this and control her life. Sakine acknowledged that her mother's attempt to control her only made her want to rebel more.[7]
  • A protest took place at Sakine's school, they were fighting for improved school conditions. The demonstration was considered an act of resistance and Sakine felt as though she had to participate. The police threw stones at them to try and put a stop to the protests and many students got arrested. The students gathered in front of the government building awaiting the announcements. Violence began to break out and this was Sakine's first experience in an uprising situation. Many of her friends were arrested and detained.[7]
  • After the protest, school for Sakine began to feel mundane and trivial. For Sakine, the possibility of raising political developments and awareness in the classroom was more important than traditional coursework. Depending on the type of teacher that Sakine had she would be exposed to leftist ideas, school became a political gathering place rather than a place for education. Sakine began to experience a total shift in her identity as a young woman. Her desires and behaviors changed greatly and she began to surround herself with politically motivated people like herself. She also began to experience difficulties in her relationship with her fiancé, Metin, she spent less and less time thinking about him and became frustrated when he tried to give her advice on how to live her life.[7]
  • Sakine began her own group that began to gain consciousness and become stronger, it was the first revolutionary women's group. The women worked together to point out each other's weaknesses and identify mistakes in an attempt to make their group consciousness stronger. The group had no name, no headquarters, no newspaper but everyone agreed to act the same way in the face of injustice. Eventually the name “Apocu” emerged. The number of group members was increasing along with the consciousness of Kurdish identity and tradition.[7]

Sakines escape to become a revolutionary

  • Sakine still feels tied to her family, but she knows if she stays with them it will be impossible for her to be a full revolutionary. She finally makes the decision to escape in May 1975. She obtains her ID from her school by telling them that she is going to get married. She arrives at her extended family's home and they are happy to see her but they explain that they have to tell Sakines parents that she is safe with them. This infuriates her and she decides to leave to meet up with political science faculty who are going to think more similarly to her. She moves to Izmir with Baki and works in a factory alongside other workers who were mostly Kurds. Sakine and Baki decide to get married despite her previous rejection to his proposals.[7]
  • Sakine acknowledges in discussions with her Turkish friends she could tolerate some of their arguments surrounding the topic of Kurdistan, but when she is with her Kurdish friends she is unable to tolerate it. She admits that these discussions often became very confrontational, however she was educated on these topics and was not going to let others tell her she was wrong. She felt as though the Marxist classics best demonstrated the groups political outlook, it was not necessary that the name Kurdistan be used. The groups' ideological ideas were analyzed, discussed and created prior to the October revolution.
  • Sakine begins to find people that are similar to her and she starts to feel more welcomed. She goes to different political clubs where she is able to make friends that have similar ideologies as her. She was considered part of the UKO- the Kurdistan revolutionary group. Sakine decides to take a break from her relationship with Baki to focus on herself. Baki does not align with Sakine organizationally or ideologically and it is beginning to take a toll on their relationship, she admits to herself and her older brother that she is unhappy.[7]
  • A big demonstration took place against the state security courts, all of the different groups were going to participate. Sakine admits that she learned a lot from these events that took place in Izmir, she began to feel more comfortable defending her position even though she was far away from her home country and her organization. In the factory where she worked, Sakine explained to her peers that as a Kurdistan Revolutionary she felt as though it was her role to contribute to the workers’ resistance. Her goal was not to organize the workers and make them participate in the Kurdistan Revolution, but rather to try and help them to see their problems in comparison to the working class. By doing this, she would attempt to bring awareness to what the Kurdish people are going through and allow a consciousness of solidarity to emerge. Sakine brings up the idea of failing to perform a task because they expect someone else to do it which would insinuate that they approve of the other person's oversights, however she points out that someone with a revolutionary consciousness would not behave this way. Instead, they do what others neglect, even if it means she will not be taken seriously it is better to be involved in the conversation and stand up for what she believes in than to stand on the sidelines and not participate.[7]

Activities

Cansız was arrested in 1979 soon after graduating high school.[14] According to The Guardian, she was arrested just after the 1980 Turkish coup d'état.[1]

After the Turkish coup d'etat of September 1980, Sakine was imprisoned along with other members of the PKK. She spent years in jail in Diyarbakir where 34 inmates died of torture between the years 1981 and 1989. The treatment that they received in the prison was horrible and was one of the main reasons for the organizations radicalization and the increased armed struggle against the Turkish that began in 1984.[1]

She was one of the PKK's founding members (code name "Sara"), and the organization's first senior female member.[14] At the founding meeting of the PKK in Lice in southern Turkey in late September or November 1978 (with 22 persons attending), she represented Elâzığ, the administrative center of Elâzığ Province.[13][15][16] Cansız and Öcalan's former wife Kesire Yıldırım were the only women who participated in this meeting.[15] Cansız was arrested in May 1979 in Diyarbakır Prison and tortured there,[17] but continued to lead the Kurdish movement while in jail, becoming a "legend among PKK members".[1][18]

After her release in 1991, Cansız stayed in the PKK camps in Lebanon's Beqaa Valley and then in northern Iraq where she fought under the command of Osman Ocalan.[19][20] In addition to fighting she organized and headed women squads of the PKK there.[18][19] She went to Europe in the mid-1990s.[19] Murat Karayılan sent her there[1] to be responsible for the PKK's European branch,[18] first in Germany and then in France, to deal with the group's civil affairs.[1][20] According to Hürriyet, she was moved to Europe after having opposed the execution of PKK member Mehmet Şener.[14] France granted Cansız asylum in 1998[21] after she had disagreed with some senior PKK figures.[13] She was detained in Hamburg in March 2007 upon Turkeys request, but released after protests opposing her detention in April 2007.[17]

Reportedly, "she was the most prominent and most important female Kurdish activist. She did not shy away from speaking her mind, especially when it came to women's issues."[1]

Revolutionary Activities

Sakine is fired from her job at the factory with no just reason. She becomes frustrated and questions her boss as to why she is being let go. Her boss is unable to give her a valid reason for her termination and when conflict arises between the two her boss calls the police. When the police arrive they grab Sakine and try and force her into the car, she is somehow able to break free and run away toward the factory. The other workers are on their lunch break and begin to join in on the resistance. They made it evident that they were not going to leave the lunch room until the police pulled away. Sakine says this day was a precursor for a strike. As predicted, the next day a strike occurred and out of 350 workers, half participated. Although this was not a bad turnout, Sakine was worried that if more people did not begin to participate that some of the workers would change their mind and go back to work. The police had enough and began to physically remove Sakine and some of her friends. The police were violent in their actions, pulling Sakine's hair and beating her with a club. She was forced onto a bus with twenty others where they were brought to a police station in Alsancak. Upon being released from the police station, a hunger strike broke out which landed Sakine and her peers back in the police station. Again, they were all taken in for questioning and then transferred to a prison in Buca. In the prison the men and the women were separated. The women had access to newspapers and Sakine was pleased to notice that the newspapers demonstrated that they had achieved their goals.

Death

On 10 January 2013, Cansız, in her 50s, was found dead with two other Kurdish female activists, Fidan Doğan and Leyla Şaylemez. Autopsy results placed the time of death for the three women as sometime between 6pm and 7pm on the day before.[18][22][23] Their bodies were found in the Kurdistan Information Center in Paris.[21]

The three women were last seen inside an information center on a Wednesday afternoon, hours later a member of the Kurdish community tried to visit the center but the door was locked. The three women were found dead with gunshot wounds in the information center on Thursday morning. This was the first time that a senior member of the PKK had been killed in Europe.[24]

Demonstration by Kurds in Paris following murders

The killings occurred at a time when the Turkish government was in negotiation with PKK leaders including Öcalan. PKK activists in Paris considered the murders an attempt by "dark forces" within the Turkish government to derail these negotiations. The PKK blamed the Turkish government. Turkish officials pointed at frequent strife within the PKK,[25] with the Turkish national daily Hürriyet claiming that Cansız had been in conflict with Ferman Hussein, the alleged commander of the PKK's military wing.[14] Also killed were Fidan Doğan of the Kurdistan National Congress (based in Brussels) and Leyla Söylemez, a "junior activist". The French interior minister Manuel Valls announced that the three women were all killed execution-style.[26] Two days after the murder, Ömer Güney was detained and later prosecuted for the assassination of the three women. The prosecutor François Molins concluded that the surveillance cameras showed that Ömer Güney was within the Kurdish Information Center during the time of the assassination.[27] And on his bag was found gunpowder.[27]

On 17 December 2016, Ömer Güney, the sole suspect in the assassination of Sakine Cansız, Fidan Doğan and Leyla Şaylemez died of a severe illness in his Paris prison cell.[28] After his death the French authority decided to close the investigation into the assassination of the three women. In May 2019 the investigation was reopened.[29]

Funeral

The body of Cansız together with those of the other two women murdered was brought from Paris to Istanbul on 16 January 2013 and transferred to Diyarbakır. A funeral ceremony for the three slain women was held in Diyarbakır with the attendance of tens of thousands of Kurds on 17 January 2013.[30] Each was buried in her hometown: Cansız in Tunceli, Doğan in Kahramanmaraş, and Söylemez in Mersin.[31]

Reactions

Both Turkey and France condemned the killings of the three women.[32] Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan suggested that the murders were done for two possible reasons: 1) to derail the current negotiations or 2) to carry out an internal execution within the PKK. Turkey's Deputy Prime Minister and government spokesman Bülent Arınç condemned the attack and expressed his condolences.[33]

See also

  • List of unsolved murders

References

  1. Letsch, Constanze (10 January 2013). "Sakine Cansiz: 'a legend among PKK members'". The Guardian. Retrieved 10 January 2013.
  2. "Slain Kurdish activist Cansiz leaves stamp on militant PKK". Reuters. 11 January 2013. Retrieved 11 January 2013.
  3. Jacinto, Leela (11 January 2013). "Slain PKK member was a rebel with a cause". France 24. Retrieved 12 January 2013.
  4. Cansiz, Sakine (2015). Mein ganzes Leben war ein Kampf. Neuss: Mezopotamya Verlag. pp. 90–91. ISBN 978-3941012981.
  5. Cansiz, Sakine (2015). Mein ganzes Leben war ein Kampf. 1. Neuss: Mezopotamya Verlag. p. 73. ISBN 978-3941012981.
  6. Cansiz, Sakine (2015). Mein ganzes Leben war ein Kampf. 1. Neuss: Mezopotamya Verlag. p. 64. ISBN 978-3941012981.
  7. Cansiz, Sakine (2018). My Whole Life was a Struggle. London: Pluto Press. pp. Whole book. ISBN 9780745338033.
  8. Cansiz, Sakine (2015). Mein ganzes Leben war ein Kampf. 1. Neuss: Mezopotamya Verlag. p. 45. ISBN 978-3941012981.
  9. Cansiz, Sakine (2015). Mein ganzes Leben war ein Kampf. 1. Neuss: Mezopotamya Verlag. pp. 72–73. ISBN 978-3941012981.
  10. Cansiz, Sakine (2015). Mein ganzes Leben war ein Kampf. 1. Neuss: Mezopotamya Verlag. p. 99. ISBN 978-3941012981.
  11. Cansiz, Sakine (2015). Mein ganzes Leben war ein Kampf. 1. Neuss: Mezopotamya Verlag. p. 103. ISBN 978-3941012981.
  12. Cansiz, Sakine (2015). Mein ganzes Leben war ein Kampf. 1. Neuss: Mezopotamya Verlag. pp. 184–185. ISBN 978-3941012981.
  13. Buller, Daren (11 January 2013). "Slain Kurdish activist Cansiz leaves stamp on militant PKK". Reuters. İstanbul. Retrieved 12 January 2013.
  14. "Three PKK members killed in Paris attack". Hürriyet. 10 January 2013. Retrieved 10 January 2013.
  15. "Paris slaying puts spotlight on Kurdish female warriors". The Times of Israel. 11 January 2013. Retrieved 12 January 2013.
  16. Jongerden, Joost; Akkaya, Ahmet Hamdi (2011). "The Making of the PKK". In Marlies Casier (ed.). Nationalisms and Politics in Turkey: Political Islam, Kemalism, and the Kurdish Issue. Joost Jongerden. Taylor & Francis. p. 136. ISBN 9780415583459. Retrieved 10 January 2013.
  17. "Who was Sakine Cansiz, co-founder of the PKK?". Pluto Press. 24 April 2018. Retrieved 6 November 2019.
  18. "Kurdish PKK co-founder Sakine Cansiz shot dead in Paris". BBC. 10 January 2013. Retrieved 10 January 2013.
  19. Fraser, Suzan (11 January 2013). "Sakine Cansiz Murdered". Huffington Post. Ankara. Retrieved 12 January 2013.
  20. "Murder of Kurdish activists' possible inside job". Asharq Alawsat. 11 January 2013. Retrieved 3 July 2013.
  21. Elaine Ganley; Suzan Fraser (10 January 2013). "PKK Executions In Paris". Huffington Post. Retrieved 10 January 2013.
  22. "Autopsy: Kurdish women died between 6 and 7pm". FIRAT news agency. 11 January 2013. Archived from the original on 15 January 2013. Retrieved 14 January 2013.
  23. "Funeral for PKK members set to take place Jan 16". Hurriyet Daily News. Istanbul. 14 January 2013. Retrieved 14 January 2013.
  24. "Kurdish PKK co-founder Sakine Cansiz shot dead in Paris". BBC News. 10 January 2013.
  25. Morris, Harvey (10 January 2013). "Theories Link Paris Murders to Kurdish Peace Moves". The New York Times. Retrieved 10 January 2013.
  26. Memmott, Mark (10 January 2013). "Three Kurdish Activists Found Dead In Paris; 'Without Doubt An Execution'". NPR. Retrieved 10 January 2013.
  27. Rundschau, Frankfurter. "Attentat in Paris: Wer ist Ömer Güney?". Frankfurter Rundschau (in German). Retrieved 24 January 2018.
  28. "Culprit of the murder in Paris of Sakine, Fidan and Leyla dies". ANF. 17 December 2016.
  29. "France reopens probe into killing of 3 Kurdish activists". France 24. 15 May 2019. Retrieved 27 July 2019.
  30. "PKK shooting: Kurds mass for women's funerals". BBC. 17 January 2013. Retrieved 17 January 2013.
  31. "Funerals held in hometowns for three Kurdish women killed in Paris". Today's Zaman. 18 January 2013. Archived from the original on 16 February 2013. Retrieved 20 January 2013.
  32. "Police hunt killers of PKK co-founder Sakine Cansiz". BBC. 11 January 2013. Retrieved 12 January 2013.
  33. "Three Kurdish women murdered in Paris". Deutsche Welle. 11 January 2013. Retrieved 11 January 2013.
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