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Turkish prosecutor demands life over Kurd killings


Wednesday, 15 July, 2009 , 15:48

DIYARBAKIR, Turkey, July 15, 2009 (AFP) — A prosecutor wants life sentences for seven suspects, among them an army colonel, over the summary killing of 2O people in Turkey's southeast at the height of a Kurdish insurgency in the 1990s, according to a copy of the charge sheet obtained by AFP Wednesday.

The indictment said Colonel Cemal Temizoz set up a rogue unit that detained and questioned people for helping armed Kurdish rebels or to settle personal accounts when he was stationed in southeastern Sirnak province from 1993-1996.

Members of the unit, acting on orders from Temizoz, killed some of those questioned, often burying their bodies in shallow graves in uninhabited areas after taking their identification papers, the charge sheet added.

The unit "committed several crimes including premeditated murder and in the process used means and equipment provided by the state to facilitate the struggle against" Kurdish rebels, it said.

The prosecutor was demanding life imprisonment with no chance of parole for all seven suspects which he held responsible for the murders of 20 people, the indictment said.

The trial is expected to start in the coming weeks at a court in the regional capital of Diyarbakir.

The indictment came after a series of excavations in the southeast of the country in March and April, as part of an investigation into allegations of extrajudicial killings by security forces, resulted in the discovery of bone fragments.

The investigation was launched after a former member of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) who later became an informer said in remarks published in the Turkish press that several people were went missing in the 1990s had in fact been executed summarily.

Some 45,000 people have been killed since the PKK took up arms against the Turkish state for self-rule in the Kurdish majority southeast. The conflict has displaced thousands and led to allegations of gross human rights violations by both sides.