Sakine Cansiz
- Geburt:
- 00.00.1958
- Tot:
- 09.01.2013
- Kategorien:
- Figur des öffentlichen Lebens, Kommunist, Von einem Terroranschlag
- Nationalitäten:
- kurde
- Friedhof:
- Geben Sie den Friedhof
Sakine Cansız was one of the co-founders of the Kurdistan Workers' Party (or PKK). A Kurdish activist in the 1980s, she was arrested and tortured by Turkish police. A close associate of Abdullah Öcalan and a senior member of the PKK, she was shot dead in Paris, France, on 9 January 2013, with two other female Kurdish activists, Fidan Doğanand Leyla Söylemez.
Cansız was born around 1958 in Tunceli, a city in eastern Turkey, to an Alevi family.
In her youth in the early 1970s, she began to take part in revolutionary activities, which were not endorsed by her family. She fled to Ankara where she first met Abdullah Öcalan, with whom she would work closely. In an interview, she said of this period: "In a sense I abandoned the family. I did not accept that pressure, insisting on revolutionism. That's how I left and went to Ankara. In secret of course."
Cansız was arrested in 1979 soon after graduating high school. According to The Guardian, she was arrested just after the 1980 Turkish coup d'état.
She was one of the PKK's founding members, and the organization's first senior female member.
At the founding meeting of the PKK in Lice in southern Turkey in late September or November 1978 (with 22 persons attending), she representedElâzığ, the administrative center of Elâzığ Province.Cansız and Öcalan's former wife Kesire Yıldırım were the only women who participated in this meeting. Cansız was detained in the 1980s in Diyarbakır Prison and tortured there, but continued to lead the Kurdish movement while in jail, becoming a "legend among PKK members".
After her release in 1991, Cansız stayed in the PKK camps in Lebanon's Beqaa Valley and then in northern Iraq where she fought under the command of Osman Ocalan. In addition to fighting she organized and headed women squads of the PKK there. She went to Europe in the mid-1990s.[9] Murat Karayılan sent her there to be responsible for the PKK's European branch, first in Germany and then in France, to deal with the group's civil affairs. According to Hürriyet, she was moved to Europe after having opposed the execution of PKK member Mehmet Şener. France granted Cansız asylum in 1998[11]after she had disagreed with some senior PKK figures.
Reportedly, "she was the most prominent and most important female Kurdish activist. She did not shy away from speaking her mind, especially when it came to women's issues."
It was also reported that she disagreed with Zübeyir Yılmaz, the alleged financial head of the PKK, with claims made in the Turkish media that he had sexually harassed her.
On 10 January 2013, Cansız, in her 50s, was found dead with two other Kurdish female activists. Autopsy results placed the time of death for the three women as sometime between 6pm and 7pm on the day before. Their bodies were found in the Kurdistan Information Center in Paris.
The killings occurred at a time when the Turkish government was in negotiation with PKK leaders including Öcalan. PKK activists in Paris considered the murders an attempt by "dark forces" within the Turkish government to derail these negotiations. Turkish officials pointed at frequent strife within the PKK, with the Turkish national daily Hürriyetreporting that Cansız had been in conflict withFerman Hussein, a Syrian national and the alleged commander of the PKK's military wing. Also killed were Fidan Doğan of the Kurdistan National Congress (based in Brussels) and Leyla Söylemez, a "junior activist". The French interior minister Manuel Valls announced that the three women were all killed execution-style
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