Kurdish families continue anti-PKK sit-in Turkey's Diyarbakır
"I want my daughter. I know who kidnapped her. I'm not leaving here without my daughter. If she is dead, I want her dead body," Mehmet Laçin, whose daughter was kidnapped by the PKK terrorists eight years ago, told reporters on Monday.
- Türkiye
- Anadolu Agency
- Published Date: 04:29 | 16 December 2019
- Modified Date: 04:29 | 16 December 2019
Dozens of families have been staging a sit-in protest against the PKK terror group in the southeastern province of Diyarbakır outside the provincial office of a Turkish opposition party long accused by the government of having links to the PKK.
The protest started on Sept. 3 in Diyarbakır after a mother, Fevziye Çetinkaya, said her 17-year-old son had been forcibly recruited by the PKK through members of the Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP).
Since then, the number of families in front of the building is growing as families demand the return of their children, who, they claim, were deceived or kidnapped by PKK terrorists.
Mehmet Laçin said his daughter had been kidnapped eight years ago.
Laçin said her daughter Gamze had been kidnapped when she was a senior at the high school.
The father vowed to continue the sit-in protest in front of the HDP's office until he gets her daughter back.
"I want my daughter. I know who kidnapped her. I'm not leaving here without my daughter. If she is dead, I want her dead body," he told Anadolu Agency on Monday.
Laçin traveled to Diyarbakır from Izmir, an Aegean province, to join the other families in their protest.
"You live under the Turkish flag. Everyone has their citizenship rights in Turkey. I want them to respect the Turkish flag [...] I cannot stand any longer, I cannot sleep as I cannot forget. My daughter had dreams, her youth is gone, let her come back to the home."
In its more than 30-year terror campaign against Turkey, the PKK -- listed as a terrorist organization by Turkey, the U.S. and the European Union -- has been responsible for deaths of 40,000 people, including women, children and infants.
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