“We want the kids to be prosecuted by the juvenile courts,” Justice Minister Sadullah Engin said. “We want the possibility of alternative punishments for the under 18s.” The proposal needs to be approved by a parliamentary judicial committee before a floor vote in coming weeks.
One of Turkey’s key goals is to bring an end to fighting with the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party, or PKK, which is considered a terrorist group by the EU and the United States. The terrorist group seeks autonomy for Turkish Kurds, and launched attacks in 1984. Tens of thousands of people have died.
Turkey has jailed hundreds of minors, aged 15 to17, on charges of backing a terrorist organization for joining pro-PKK protests. The stiff law was introduced by Erdoğan’s government in 2005 in a bid to prevent protests by youths who set up barricades and threw stones or firebombs at police during protests in towns and cities in the predominantly Kurdish Southeast. Nearly 500 teens were detained in Diyarbakır, the main city in Turkey’s Kurdish-dominated Southeast, in 2008 alone, according to the city’s bar association.
Under the amendments, the minors would be prosecuted by juvenile courts instead of courts specializing in anti-terrorism cases. Prison sentences would be replaced by fines, and the youths could be made to enroll in vocational courses or in community help programs.
Erdoğan’s government also planned to open debate on plans for greater rights for Kurds, despite opposition accusations that the governing party is making too many concessions to Kurdish terrorists and threatening the country’s unity.
Last month, authorities released a small band of Kurdish terrorists who crossed into Turkey from bases in northern Iraq and surrendered in a peace gesture. The government hopes to persuade thousands of other PKK terrorists to end their decades-long fight, but any reconciliation process is likely to be a lengthy one.
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