
Courtesy NBC News
By Daren Butler, Reuters
ISTANBUL -- Jailed Kurdish militant leader Abdullah Ocalan envisages the
withdrawal of his fighters from Turkey by August under a draft peace plan sent
to his group's leadership and Kurdish politicians, media reports said
Wednesday.
Held in an island jail since his capture in 1999, Ocalan has been negotiating
with Turkey's government since October over the outlines of a deal to end a
conflict which has killed 40,000 people since his fighters took up arms in
1984.
Under the plan -- to which his Kurdistan Workers Party was expected to
respond within two weeks -- the rebels would begin a formal ceasefire on March
21, the Kurdish New Year, said the Sabah and Star newspapers, which are close to
the government.
They said the militants' withdrawal from Turkish territory was planned for
completion by Aug. 15, the 29th anniversary of a conflict which has destabilized
Turkey and held back development in its mainly Kurdish southeast.
The accuracy of the reports could not immediately be confirmed.
This timetable is dependent on Turkey passing reforms increasing the rights
of a Kurdish minority numbering about 15 million - around 20
percent of Turkey's population of 76 million.
The newspaper reports said Ocalan's plan proposed maintaining Turkey's
unitary structure, with no demand for Kurdish autonomy.
"Nobody should stand up and demand anything which is aimed at harming our
national unity," Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan told reporters late Tuesday.
"If they put down their weapons and leave our country there are many places
in the world they can go," he said.
Kurdish cultural rights boosted
During his decade in
power, Erdogan has pushed through reforms boosting Kurdish cultural rights but
Kurdish politicians seek wider political reforms, including a new constitution
boosting equality and increased Kurdish language education.
The PKK took up arms in 1984 with the aim of carving out a Kurdish state, but
subsequently moderated its goal to limited self-rule. It is designated a
terrorist group by Turkey, the United States and European Union.
The militants have pledged allegiance to Ocalan but voiced caution about the
prospects of rapid progress towards a deal, criticizing continued military
operations in southeast Turkey and northern Iraq, where thousands of the
militants are based.
Among initial steps proposed under the process, the PKK could release more
than a dozen Turkish security forces personnel that it is holding captive.
However, senior PKK commander Duran Kalkan said any such release would depend
on what steps Turkey takes.
"Nobody should expect this from us unilaterally," Kalkan said in an interview
with the PKK-linked Firat news agency.
In talks with Kurdish politicians at the weekend, Ocalan warned Turkey could
become as troubled as Syria or Iraq if steps were not taken to end the
insurgency.