A former terrorist told Anadolu Agency how he was "deceived" into joining the terrorist group PKK and how he regrets doing so now.
The former terrorist, identified as M.A., told how he joined around 2014, when the terrorist PKK was using the fight to free Ayn al-Arab (Kobani) in northern Syria from Daesh/ISIS to incite armed violence in Turkey.
That October, the PKK and its political extensions and supporters used Ayn al-Arab as a pretext to sow discord and bloodshed in Turkey.
"I took part in these events with my circle of friends. At first, I took part in the street demonstrations," said M.A.
"Some of my friends got caught. One of my friends went to the office of Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP) to ask about others who got caught," he added, referring to a political party now facing possible closure over its reported ties to terrorists.
This contact with the HDP led him to PKK members hiding out in the countryside, said M.A.
"With intense propaganda, people were prepared to be sent to the rural ranks of the (PKK) organization. So I decided to participate, impressed by the events of Kobani," he added.
Telling how he went to Syria illegally, joined the terrorist group, and got armed and ideological training, M.A. said he was a so-called "team commander" before he was appointed a bodyguard to Muzaffer Ayata, one of the PKK's so-called leaders.
"The HDP and Democratic Regions Party (DBP) are the political branches of the PKK terrorist group," he explained.
Top political figures in the HDP are chosen by the so-called "Presidential Council" of the PKK, he added, saying there is no independent process.
"Individuals identified by the PKK under the leadership of the HDP/DBP deliver the instructions of the leader of the terrorist organization, Abdullah Ocalan, to the organization in rural Iraq," he said, referring to the PKK ringleader, who is serving a life sentence in Turkish prison.
He said these instructions are not brought in writing, they are transmitted orally.
"Leyla Guven, one of the deputies of the HDP, began and ended her hunger strike on the orders of the PKK. It wasn't the decision of the HDP or Leyla Guven. These instructions are given openly or in code by the press organs of organizations affiliated with the PKK," he explained.
Stressing how his thoughts changed after he joined PKK terrorists, M.A. recalled: "They were agitating for the Kurds in my environment. I was impressed by this, went to Syria, and joined the terrorist group."
He added: "A certain amount of time after joining, I realized that I had been deceived, used as a tool. As much as I wanted to escape, I couldn't escape because it was so strictly controlled.
"The last time I escaped, I surrendered to security forces of the Turkish Republic of my own free will. I regret joining the group."
With the latest such surrender, on April 27, the number of terrorists who have laid down their arms through persuasion efforts in 2021 has risen to 58, according to Interior Ministry data.
Offenders in Turkey linked to terrorist groups who surrender are eligible for possible sentence reductions under a repentance law.
In its more than 35-year terror campaign against Turkey, the PKK-listed as a terrorist organization by Turkey, the US and the EU-has been responsible for the deaths of at least 40,000 people, including women, children and infants.
On March 17, Turkey's top prosecutor filed an indictment seeking dissolution of the HDP, calling it an undemocratic party that colludes with the terrorist group PKK and seeks to destroy the unity of the state.
The indictment accuses HDP leaders and members of acting in a way that flouts the democratic and universal rules of law, colluding with the terrorist PKK and affiliated groups, and aiming to destroy and eliminate the indivisible integrity of the state, country, and nation.