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Dublin: 16 °C Monday 20 May, 2013

Three Kurdish women activists shot dead in Paris hit

The French Interior Minister visited the scene and described the killings as “assassinations”.

Kurdish activists gather outside a building where the three Kurdish women were shot dead, in Paris.
Kurdish activists gather outside a building where the three Kurdish women were shot dead, in Paris.
Image: Jacques Brinon/AP/Press Association Images

THREE KURDISH WOMEN, said to include a founding member of the outlawed Kurdistan Worker’s Party (PKK), were shot dead overnight in Paris in what France’s interior minister dubbed an “assassination”.

The women were found in the early hours with gunshot wounds to the head and neck inside a Kurdish information centre in the 10th district of the French capital, police and the centre’s director said.

French Interior Minister Manuel Valls visited the scene of the crime and described the killings as “assassinations”, but he declined to speculate when asked about a possible political motivation for the crime.

“Three women have been shot down, killed, without doubt executed. This is a very serious incident, which is why I am here. It is completely unacceptable,” he told reporters.

French anti-terror police have opened a probe into the murders, officials said.

Protests

Hundreds of Kurds gathered today in front of the centre to protest at the deaths, with some of them chanting “We are all PKK!” and “Turkey assassin, Hollande complicit”, referring to French President Francois Hollande.

The murders came after Turkish media reported Wednesday that the Turkish government and jailed PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan had agreed on a roadmap to end a three-decade-old insurgency that has claimed around 45,000 lives.

The PKK, listed as a terrorist organisation by Turkey and by much of the international community, took up arms in Kurdish-majority southeastern Turkey in 1984, sparking a conflict that has claimed some 45,000 lives.

One of the dead in the Paris centre was Sakine Cansiz, the Federation of Kurdish Associations in France said in a statement which described her as a founding member of the PKK.

A second was said to be 32-year-old Fidan Dogan, an employee of the centre, who was also the Paris representative of the Brussels-based Kurdistan National Congress.

The third was Leyla Soylemez, described by the federation as a “young activist”.

The three were last seen alive midday on Wednesday at the centre on the first floor of a building on Lafayette street, according to the centre’s director, Leon Edart.

Bodies found by friends and colleagues

Friends and colleagues who tried and failed to contact them eventually went to the centre and found traces of blood on the door, which they then forced open to find the bodies of the three inside around 01:00am local time, said Edart.

Two of the women were shot in the neck while the third had wounds to her forehead and stomach, the Kurdish federation said.

There are around 150,000 Kurds in France, the vast majority of them of Turkish origin.

French police in October detained a suspected European leader of the PKK and three other members of the group as part of a probe into terrorism financing and association with a terrorist group.

A source close to the case said investigators were probing whether those arrested had been trying to obtain weapons of war.

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan in September accused France and Germany of obstructing Ankara’s fight against the PKK.

Erdogan’s government recently revealed that Turkish intelligence services had for weeks been talking to Ocalan, who has been held on the island prison of Imrali south of Istanbul since his capture in 1999.

Under the reported peace roadmap, the government would reward a ceasefire by granting wider rights to Turkey’s Kurdish minority, whose population is estimated at up to 15 million in the 75-million nation.

The rebels also reportedly want the release of hundreds of Kurdish activists and the recognition of Kurdish identity in Turkey’s new constitution.

- © AFP 2013.

Read: Turkish PM issues first ever apology for killing of 14,000 Kurds>

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Comments (25 Comments)

  • One of the many reasons Turkey should not join the EU & the EU should not cooperate with Turkey.

    Reply
    • Are you sure it was the Turkish that done it. It could just as easily been an internal feud within the Kurdish organization. You automaticly jumped to the conclusion that the Turkish government is responsible without any proof.

      Reply
    • Not to mention northern Cyprus!

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    • Mjhint 10/01/13 #

      I agree Michael with your point that it may seem that way but I am saying what I said because of the treatment of the Kurds by the Turks & the fact that they criticise EU members for actively preventing the Turks bring them to so called Turkish justice. I have to say I have no idea who killed these people in Paris but the Kurds are one of the largest ethnic groups in the word without a state & they have been treated very badly in Turkey as well as Iraq.

      Reply
    • Mjhint nobody is denying that they have been mistreated in the past. And one of the main reasons being when the British and French were dividing up the old Ottoman empire into the countries that we know today they made a piss poor job of it. But thats done and we have what we have. There are an estimated 15 million Kurds in Turkey that by anyone’s standards is a very large voting block. Yet a minority of them chose to go down the Terrorist road and 46000 people are dead because of it. Now that the Turks are even willing to talk to the Kurdish leader is a giant step for them. Why would they commit what appears from the evidence so far as a very amiturish assination. When they could and have deployed some very professional teams has they have done in the past.

      Reply
    • Look in the direction of Baghdad – The Turks have (over the last 3 months) signed oil export deals with the semi-autonomous Kurdistan region of Iraq, much to the bitterness of the central government in Baghdad who demand that they control the oil exports in Kurdistan and do not want this happening.

      These assignations have the possibility to scrap these agreements and move the PKK & Turkish army into conflict again – something the Baghdad central government would like to see hinder this growing relationship of the Kurdish & Turkish governments.

      No Tin-foil hat, Read more here:
      http://www.upstreamonline.com/live/article1313298.ece

      Reply
  • The plight of the Kurdish people deserves more attention than the western media afford it.

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  • Yep but geopolitics is more important to the western media and its overlords.

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  • A Paris hit in the middle of the night? Had to be Jason Bourne.

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  • or the US thanking the Turks for their support over the years…

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  • Have none of you noticed that these killings happened after the Turkish government started talks with the PKK leader. Does it not strike you as possible schism within the PKK. Remember a similar thing happened here with the INLA. They were killing each other left right and centre. But you lot would rather see the big bad boogey man hiding in the corner.

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    • Mick, You are brainwashed.

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    • Why because I want to see some evidence!!! You are the one jumping to conclusions.

      Reply
    • Because you believe all you are told. When the United States make bold unsustainable claims about world issues most people just believe them without an ounce of truth being offered. The same goes for their minions. Please do a bit of research on the treatment of the Kurdish people by the Turkish government before making unfounded claims.
      Maybe you wont release whats going on until what happened to the Armenian Turks 100 years ago happens again. For me, that will be a bit to late. That’s just me though.

      Reply
    • *realise

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    • Steo lets look at what we know so far. 3 women are dead. 1 was shot front on so we can assume she was the first to die. The other 2 were neck shot. Which usually means that the killer had them kneel down and shot them in the back of the neck. All of which points to someone that had time and wanted to make a point to the victims before killing them. A professional hit team would have gone in killed the 3 of them and gotten out in the shortest time possible. Less chance for accidental discovery.
      You on the other hand are willing to dismiss outright even the possibility of this being internal.

      Reply
  • Sooner or later Those group or regime were behind the assasintion of three Kurdish human rights and political activist, will pay the Full price

    Reply
  • The Turkish regime is worst regime of its kind in the World, There are more than 20 million Kurds living in Kurdistan-Turkey, The Kurds are the only nation in the world without a Country! unfortunately nowadays we dont care about human rights, freedom, justice and Democracy!!??? The EU just care about Bussiness …..

    Reply
  • Dar Ryl 10/01/13 #

    It was little miss muffet, as she is sick of having Kurds in her way

    Reply
  • padraig 11/01/13 #

    The Kurds have an array of factions and parties that barely like each other, and have fought each other at times, like in Northern Iraq when the no fly zone had just been created. One side even used the help of Saddam Hussein. Any government in the region would be insane if it carries out that hit, which will probably yield plenty of clues to French Police. That said, who really knows at this point?

    Reply
  • It’s Bord BIA’s fault …britain israel..america

    Reply

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