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Pro-Kurdish candidate fights anti-migrant sentiment in Turkiye

Pro-Kurdish candidate fights anti-migrant sentiment in Turkiye
Veli Sacilik, right, is fighting anti-refugee rhetoric which dominates the campaign for municipal elections on March 31 in the city of Bolu. (AFP)
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Updated 25 March 2024

Pro-Kurdish candidate fights anti-migrant sentiment in Turkiye

Pro-Kurdish candidate fights anti-migrant sentiment in Turkiye

BOLU, Turkiye: A pro-Kurdish candidate, who lost his arm in prison during a police raid after a hunger strike in 2000, has turned three decades of social activism into a fight against the anti-migrant sentiment dominating local elections in Turkiye.

Veli Sacilik, 47, made a name for himself with a 2017 photograph of demonstrations in Ankara against a civil service purge, where he is seen struggling with his left arm against riot shields.

Now the former prisoner is fighting anti-refugee rhetoric which dominates the campaign for municipal elections on March 31 in the city of Bolu in northwestern Turkiye.

Standing for the pro-Kurdish Dem party, Sacilik wants to ā€œoffer a democratic alternativeā€ for his city which he says is ā€œstuck between racism and a rent economy.ā€

The debate on Turkiye’s 3.3 million Syrian refugees has virtually disappeared since the May 2023 presidential election, except in Bolu, where Sacilik’s opponents have built their campaign on anti-migrant sentiment.

One such opponent is the outgoing mayor Tanju Ozcan of the main opposition CHP party, known for displaying an anti-Syrian refugee banner at Bolu’s entrance.

ā€œTanju Ozcan is a populist. If you don’t fight against wars and for the environment, you can’t solve immigration issues,ā€ said Sacilik, accompanied by his Kurdish running mate, Birsen Bas.

ā€œWe are the candidates of the anti-populists, the young and the urban poor.ā€

Despite Syrian refugees making up just 1.2 percent of the city’s population, Ozcan has tried to pursue anti-migrant policies including a failed attempt to charge them ten times more for water or to withdraw business permits. Ozcan did not respond to a request for an interview with AFP.

At first glance, everything seems to pit socialist Sacilik against his conservative and veiled running mate or ā€œco-chairwomanā€ Bas.

But Sacilik sees these differences as an asset to politics rather than a disadvantage.

Indeed co-chairing, where a political position is jointly occupied by a woman and a man, became integral to the Kurdish political tradition following the struggle of the Kurdish women’s movement in the 1990s.

ā€œAs a man and a woman, Alevi and Sunni, disabled and able-bodied, secular and conservative, we embrace all identities,ā€ he said smiling.

Their alliance also opens doors to working-class conservative districts of Bolu, home to almost 20,000 voters of Kurdish origin.

ā€œHere, most women are made to stay at home, and they are even afraid to have their photo taken without their husband’s permission,ā€ said Bas.

ā€œI talk to them about women’s rights and reassure them.ā€

Many residents, however, still fear being seen with pro-Kurdish candidates. Attacks on shopkeepers and workers of Kurdish origin across several Turkish cities in 2015 are still fresh in people’s minds.

ā€œI have been in Bolu for 30 years, my children were born here, they don’t even speak Kurdish but my restaurant was stoned by my neighbors,ā€ said an anonymous shopkeeper.

Dem, formerly the Pro-Kurdish People’s Democratic HEDEP party, is a successor to the leftist HDP, which Freedom House has said ā€œsuffered legal and even physical attacks from the Turkish authorities.ā€

Dem is now the third-largest political party, but the HDP’s former leader Selahattin Demirtas remains imprisoned after facing ā€œterrorismā€ charges in 2016.

ā€œNationalism is on the rise in Bolu because of the mayor’s populist rhetoric,ā€ said Metin, a student of Kurdish origin.

ā€œEven some teachers look at us sideways.ā€

For Ozkan Ustun, co-president of the health workers’ union, prevailing racism prevents people from talking about ā€œunreported employment, environmental problems, transport or the risk of earthquakes in Bolu.ā€

Bolu’s emblematic storks no longer stop in the city because of deforestation and the construction of an irrigation basin, Ustun added.

The outgoing mayor ā€œannounced that he doesn’t want any more immigrants, so the migratory birds won’t come any more,ā€Ā joked Sacilik.