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Outside the law of the Kurdish PKK group, which launched a 40-year uprising against Turkey, announced that she lays her hands and blossom.
This step followed after calling the prison leader Abdullah Ocolon to dissolve. The group is prohibited as a terrorist grouping in Turkey, the EU, the United Kingdom and the United States.
Initially, the PCC uprising is aimed at creating an independent homeland for Kurds, which is about 20% of Turkey’s population. But since then he has departed from his separatist purposes, focusing on greater autonomy and greater Kurdish rights.
The conflict killed more than 40,000 people.
In February, the 76 -year -old Ocoln urged him to move his hands and dissolve himself. The PCC leader has been in prison in prison on the Island in the sea Marmar, southwest Istanbul, since 1999.
In February, Ocolon wrote a letter from a prison saying: “There is no alternative to democracy in the pursuit and implementation of the political system. The main consensus is the main way.”
It is unclear that Ocalan and his supporters will receive in return for the debauchery, but there are suggestions that he can be released.
Kurdish politicians will rely on a new political dialogue and a path to great Kurdish rights.
Both sides had reasons to make a deal now.
In recent years, the Turkish military has suffered greatly, and regional changes have complicated them and their branches to work in Iraq and Syria.
President Erdogan needs support for professional political parties if he can start again in the next Turkish presidential election in 2028.
The decree on the deburgeon was an important step towards “turkey without terror”, and the process will be controlled by state institutions, said a spokesman for the AK Presidential Party party, Tayyip Erdogan, Reuters reports.
Winthrop Rodgers from the international analytical tank Chatham House said it would take the “main democratic transition of Turkey” to meet the requirements of Kurdish political parties.
In recent months, there has been a “goodwill” from some Turkish leaders, said Rogers, which allowed the rupture of the PCC to play.
He added: “But whether it is extended to the main changes necessary to ensure full Kurdish participation in politics and society is much less clear.
“In many ways, the ball is in Turkey’s court.”