January 21, 2016 - 13:19 AMT
Onslaught on Kurdish areas in Turkey puts thousands at risk: AI

The Turkish government’s onslaught on Kurdish towns and neighborhoods, which includes round-the-clock curfews and cuts to services, is putting the lives of up to 200,000 people at risk and amounts to collective punishment, Amnesty International said Thursday, January 21.

Research carried out by Amnesty International in areas under curfew and reports from residents in areas that are currently inaccessible to external observers, reveal the extreme hardships they are currently facing as a result of harsh and arbitrary measures.

There have also been numerous reports of security forces preventing ambulances from entering areas under curfew and providing treatment to the sick.

“Cuts to water and electricity supplies combined with the dangers of accessing food and medical care while under fire are having a devastating effect on residents, and the situation is likely to get worse, fast, if this isn’t addressed,” said John Dalhuisen, Amnesty International’s Europe and Central Asia Programme Director, according to Amnesty.

The curfews have been imposed in the context of operations by police, and increasingly by the military, in towns and cities in the east and south-east of Turkey since July 2015, when the peace process between the government and the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) broke down. More than 150 residents have reportedly been killed in areas under curfew as state forces battle the armed Patriotic Revolutionary Youth Movement (YDG-H), the youth wing of the PKK. The dead include women, young children and the elderly.

In the course of on the ground research following an earlier curfew in Cizre in September last year, Amnesty International found evidence that several deaths may have been caused by snipers at locations far from where clashes were taking place. Among those killed were young children, women and elderly people, who are very unlikely to have been involved in clashes with security forces.