Pro-Kurdish party criticizes Turkiye’s ‘hesitant’ steps toward PKK peace

People's Equality and Democracy Party (DEM) co-chairperson Tulay Hatimogullari speaks during the opening ceremony of the International Conference on Peace and Democratic Society in Istanbul, on December 6, 2025. (AFP)
People's Equality and Democracy Party (DEM) co-chairperson Tulay Hatimogullari speaks during the opening ceremony of the International Conference on Peace and Democratic Society in Istanbul, on December 6, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 29 April 2026 02:15
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Pro-Kurdish party criticizes Turkiye’s ‘hesitant’ steps toward PKK peace

Pro-Kurdish party criticizes Turkiye’s ‘hesitant’ steps toward PKK peace
  • All sides ​involved in the process, ‌including DEM, the PKK and President Tayyip Erdogan’s ‌government, have traded blame for perceived delays more than a year since hopes were raised for a breakthrough

ANKARA: Turkiye’s pro-Kurdish DEM Party ‌issued one of its strongest criticisms yet of the government’s handling of a fragile peace process, highlighting on Tuesday ​a growing stand-off between Ankara and Kurdish militants over next steps to end a decades-long conflict.
DEM is parliament’s third biggest party and helped facilitate steps toward peace between the Turkish state and the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), whose conflict has killed more than 40,000 people since 1984. Speaking ‌to her ‌party MPs, DEM co-chair ​Tulay ‌Hatimogullari ⁠said the government ​was “failing ⁠to match the momentum” created by a February 2025 call by jailed militant leader Abdullah Ocalan to lay down arms.
“While such a bright outlook lies ahead of us, and we should be moving at full speed toward the goal of ⁠peace, the government is acting in a ‌hesitant, timid and ‌stalling manner,” she said. All sides ​involved in the process, ‌including DEM, the PKK and President Tayyip Erdogan’s ‌government, have traded blame for perceived delays more than a year since hopes were raised for a breakthrough. The PKK — designated a terrorist group by Turkiye, the ‌US and EU — halted attacks and said in May 2025 it had decided ⁠to disband and ⁠end its armed struggle. But Ankara has said it must do more and that disarmament must be verified before broader legal or political steps.
A Turkish parliamentary commission voted overwhelmingly in February to approve a report setting out a roadmap for legal reforms alongside the PKK’s disbandment, shifting the process into the legislative arena. The insurgency has fueled instability in Turkiye’s mainly Kurdish southeast ​and spilled over into ​Iraq and Syria. Hatimogullari warned that delays risked derailing the broader peace process.