Pro-Kurdish party criticises Turkey's 'hesitant' steps toward PKK peace


Tulay Hatimogullari, co-chair of pro-Kurdish Peoples' Equality and Democracy Party (DEM Party), addresses their supporters during a rally in Istanbul, Turkey, February 2, 2025. REUTERS/Dilara Senkaya

ANKARA, April 28 (Reuters) - Turkey's ⁠pro-Kurdish DEM Party issued one of its strongest criticisms yet of ⁠the government's handling of a fragile peace process, highlighting on ‌Tuesday a growing stand-offbetween Ankara and Kurdish militants over next steps to end a decades-long conflict.

DEM is parliament's third biggest party and helped facilitate steps toward peace between the ​Turkish state and the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), whose ⁠conflict has killed more than ⁠40,000 people since 1984.

Speaking to her party MPs, DEM co-chair Tulay Hatimogullari ⁠said ‌the government was "failing to match the momentum" created by a February 2025 call by jailed militant leader Abdullah Ocalan to lay ⁠down arms.

"While such a bright outlook lies ahead ​of us, and we ‌should be moving at full speed toward the goal of ⁠peace, the government ​is acting in a hesitant, timid and stalling manner," she said.

All sides involved in the process, including DEM, the PKK and President Tayyip Erdogan's government, have ⁠traded blame for perceived delays morethan a ​year since hopes were raised for a breakthrough.

The PKK - designated a terrorist group by Turkey, the U.S. and EU - halted attacks and said in May ⁠2025 it had decided to disband and end its armed struggle. But Ankara has said itmust do more and that disarmament must be verified before broader legal or political steps.

A Turkish parliamentary commission voted overwhelmingly in ​February to approve a report setting out a ⁠roadmap for legal reforms alongside the PKK’s disbandment, shifting the process into ​the legislative arena.

The insurgency has fuelledinstability in Turkey’s ‌mainly Kurdish southeast and spilled over ​into Iraq and Syria. Hatimogullari warned that delays risked derailing the broader peace process.

(Reporting by Ece Toksabay; Editing by Jonathan Spicer )

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