‘Kurdish Obama’ challenges perceptions with Turkish presidential bid

Unthinkable just a few years ago, Selahattin Demirtas’ bid for Turkey’s highest office underscores how Kurdish politics has entered the mainstream even as Kurds in neighbouring Syria and Iraq push for more automony.

Peace talks between Turkey and Kurdish rebels, overseen by Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan to try to end a three-decade war, have brought two years of calm and paved the way for Demirtas to run as Turkey’s first openly Kurdish presidential

candidate.

“My candidacy is merely the most visible aspect of how much Turkey has changed as racism and extreme nationalist sentiment weaken,” Demirtas, 41, said in an interview.

Though other Kurds have figured prominently in Turkish political history, some supporters liken his candidacy to Barack Obama’s run to become the first African-American US president.

A big difference is that Demirtas is unlikely to win.

Erdogan, a devout conservative credited with overseeing a tripling of Turks’ wealth over the past decade, is the clear front runner to become Turkey’s first popularly elected president in Sunday’s election.

Two surveys last month put his support at upwards of 55%, despite a corruption scandal earlier this year, anti-government protests last summer and charges that he has polarised society along secular and

religious lines.

Main opposition candidate Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu was 20 points behind, with Demirtas in a distant third with under 10%.

Demirtas’ candidacy burnishes Erdogan’s credentials as peacemaker after he took a considerable political risk to begin talks with Abdullah Ocalan, the jailed leader of the armed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) who in 1984 launched the uprising that has claimed more than 40,000 lives.

Erdogan attracts about half the votes of Kurds, who make up a fifth of Turkey’s 76 million people. But Demirtas rejects the idea that his candidacy is Erdogan’s “gift to Kurds.”

“Turkey is changing but this is due to our efforts. If it were up to Tayyip Erdogan, he would have blocked my candidacy.”

Ihsanoglu’s supporters say Demirtas is dividing the opposition, helping deliver victory to Erdogan, who, for his part, accuses Demirtas of stoking Kurdish nationalist passions.

As US officials look to Kurds in Iraq, who want independence, to check Islamist militants, Kurds like Demirtas see their future within Turkey.

 

New kurdish image

“Kurds and American blacks have had to fight racism,” Demirtas said of comparisons with Obama. “Our candidacies are important in the fight to make equality more of a reality.”

Witty and with a toothy grin, Demirtas’ handsome image appears widely with his schoolteacher wife and two daughters, adjusting the image of Kurdish politicians among Turks with long memories of PKK violence.

The United States, Turkey and the EU list the PKK as a terror group, and most precursors to Demirtas’ People’s Democracy Party (HDP) have been outlawed for PKK links.

“That we have an outwardly Kurdish candidate from a Kurdish nationalist party is an incredible change,” said Aliza Marcus, author of “Blood and Belief,” a book about the PKK.

“His campaign allows Turks to see Kurds in a different light ... beyond the image of terrorists.”

Thousands of Kurdish politicians and activists spent up to five years in jail without conviction until most were released this year under a law linked to the peace process.

In 1994, four Kurdish lawmakers were jailed for a decade after taking the oath of office in Kurdish, a language banned outright until 1991.

Called “Mountain Turks,” Kurds’ ethnicity was denied. Politicians in the 1980s claimed the name came from “kart kurt,” the crunching sound made while treading in snow.

Demirtas’ parents spoke Turkish and not their native Zaza dialect with their seven children. “They tried to assimilate us because they knew the burden of being Kurdish,” he said.