Scepticism and cautious hope as PKK takes historic step to disband

Vocabulary: 421, Words: 921

Reuters A crowd of protestors hold yellow flags featuring the face of Abdullah Ocalan.

1After 40 years, with 40,000 people killed, and without securing a Kurdish homeland, the banned Kurdistan Workers Party, the PKK, is ending its war against the Turkish state.

2This signals the end of one of the longest conflicts in the world - a historic moment for Turkey, its Kurdish minority, and neighbouring countries into which the conflict has spilled over.

3A spokesman for President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's ruling party said it was an important step towards a country free of terror.

4But what will the PKK get for disarming and disbanding? 5So far the government has made no promisespublicly at least.

6Sheltering inside a tea shop from a sudden violent hail storm that battered the ancient city of Diyabakir, Necmettin Bilmez, 65, a driver, was sceptical about what might follow.

7"They [the government] have been tricking us for thousands of years," he said.

8"When I get an ID card in my pocket saying I am Kurdish, I will believe everything will be solved. 9Otherwise, I don't believe in this."

10Sitting nearby on a small woven stool, Mehmet Ek, 80, had a different view.

11"This has come late," he said.

12"I wish it had happened ten years ago. 13But still anyone from any side who will stop this bloodshed, I salute them," he said, tipping the top of his flat cap.

14"This conflict is brother on brother. 15The one who dies in the mountains [PKK] is ours and the soldier [from the government] is ours.

16"We are all losing, Turks and Kurds."

17He wants an amnesty for PKK fighterslike many here - and the release of jailed Kurdish politicians.

18"If all that happens it will be a beautiful peace," he said.

BBC/Ozgur Arslan A headshot of Mehmet Ek wearing a cap. He looks to the right of the camera.

19In this majority Kurdish city in south-eastern Turkey - the de facto Kurdish capital - we found a muted response to PKK's announcement.

20The city has been scarred and reshaped by the conflict.

21Turkish forces and the PKK battled in the heart of Diyarbakir in 2015. 22You can still see the rubble of buildings flattened by the Turkish army.

23Many local people told us they welcomed peace, or the idea of it, and wanted no more deaths - Turkish or Kurdish.

24"No one has achieved anything," said Ibrahim Nazlican, 63, drinking tea in the shade of the towering city walls, which have guarded Diyarbakir since Roman times.

25"There is nothing but harm and loss, on this side and on that side. 26There are no winners."

27The conflict has ranged from the mountains of northern Iraqwhich became PKK headquarters in recent years - to Turkey's biggest cities.

28Outside an Istanbul football stadium in 2016, a PKK affiliate carried out a double bombing killing 38 police officers and 8 civilians. 29Many Kurds and Turks are hoping this is the end of a dark chapter, which has claimed 40,000 lives

Getty Images Ocalan stands at an angle to the camera with his hands on his hips. Male fighters stand behind him.

30The PKK decision lay down its arms followed a call in February by its jailed leader, Abdullah Ocalan, who said there was "no alternative to democracy".

31For now, the 76-year-old remains in his cell in an island prison off of Istanbul, where he has been held since 1999.

32To his supporters, he remains a heroic figure who has put their cause on a global agenda. 33They want him released.

34LISTEN: 35The Global Jigsaw on The Kurdish issue

36Menice, 47, is among them. 37She insisted his release was the key to a new dawn for the Kurds, who account for up to 20% of the Turkish population.

38"We want peace, but if our leader is not free, we will never be free," she said.

39"If he is free, we will all be free and the Kurdish problem will be solved."

BBC/Ozgur Arslan Menice stands holding framed photographs of two young men. She looks down at the photograph on her right.

40She is surrounded by family photos of loved ones who have died fighting for the PKK - which is classed as a terrorist organisation by Turkey, the UK, the US and the EU.

41She has lost five relatives including her brother and her oldest son Zindan.

42He joined the PKK at 17, and was dead at 25, killed in a Turkish airstrike three years ago.

43Menice's eyes fill with tears as she tells us how he used to help her with the housework.

44His path may have been mapped out from birth.

45"We named him Zindan 46[meaning cell] because his father was in prison when he was born," she told us.

47One large photograph hangs on the wall shows Zindan alongside his brother, Berxwendan, who followed his footsteps "up the mountain" to the PKK, when he reached the age of 17.

48Berxwenden is now 23. 49His mother did not know if he was alive or dead until he sent his family a photo of himself during Ramadan in March.

50Menice is hoping her surviving son may now come back.

51"I hope Berxwendan and his friends will come home. 52As a mother, I want peace. 53Let there be no killings. 54Hasn't there been enough suffering for everyone?"

55But does she believe that there can be peace between Turkey and the Kurds?

56"I believe in us, in Ocalan, and our nation [the Kurds]," she said firmly.

57"The enemy [the Turkish authorities] has forced us not to believe in them."

58However, pro-Kurdish political parties have some leverage.

59Erdogan needs their support to enable him to run for a third term as president in elections due in 2028.

60For its part, the PKK has been hit hard by the Turkish military in recent years with leaders and fighters hunted down in drone warfare.

61And regional change, in Iran and Syria, means the militant group and its affiliates have less freedom to operate.

62Both sides have their reasons for doing a deal now. 63That may be grounds for hope.

from BBC