By STEPHEN KINZER
ISTANBUL, Jan. 17 -- Now that the condemned Kurdish
rebel
leader Abdullah Ocalan has been assured that he will
not be hanged,
at least for the moment, he wants to take part in the
incipient national
dialogue about how Turkey should deal with its Kurdish
minority.
But Prime Minister Bulent Ecevit has declared that
Mr. Ocalan can have
no role in that dialogue, and he has urged Mr. Ocalan
to hold his tongue.
"Ocalan and his supporters are trying to dictate
to the Turkish
government, and they are making statements with this
aim," Mr. Ecevit
told a news conference. "This is unacceptable.
It would be to his
advantage to keep quiet."
Last week, Mr. Ecevit announced that his government
had decided not
to carry out the death sentence given to Mr. Ocalan
after he was
convicted of treason in June. Mr. Ecevit said Turkey
would wait until the
European Court of Human Rights had ruled on Mr. Ocalan's
appeal,
which is most likely to take at least a year.
Some politicians and relatives of soldiers killed
while fighting Mr.
Ocalan's guerrillas protested the decision. But most
Turks seemed to
agree, albeit reluctantly, that it was in the national
interest. Turkey is a
candidate for membership in the European Union, and
European leaders
strongly oppose the death penalty. They have made clear
that Turkey's
prospects for membership will be set back if Mr. Ocalan
is executed.
After the decision to postpone the execution had
been announced, Mr.
Ocalan (pronounced OH-ja-lan) issued a statement through
his lawyers.
He called on the government to offer an amnesty to members
of his
Kurdistan Workers Party.
"It is said that if they execute me the E.U.
candidacy, the economy and
prospects for peace would all suffer," he said.
"It is true that all of these
depend on my staying alive. I am a synthesis of values,
not just a person.
I represent democracy."
Although Mr. Ocalan led what was originally a separatist
uprising, in his
statement he said:
"I am not a separatist. I have distanced myself
from historical mistakes
committed in the past. Now I am settling on the idea
of unity based on
freedom. That is what I am fighting for. We are loyal
and respectful
toward the unity of the state and nation, but on the
basis of democracy. If
we are to reach peace, there is an urgent need for reform.
"We should not be selfish, blind and unjust.
We have to learn to be
constructive. We have to trust and value each other.
The healing must be
done together, and we must see our differences as the
strength of
democracy." But after a 15-year insurgency, few
Turks are ready to
accept the idea that Mr. Ocalan could become a political
figure. Many
consider him a terrorist and find it outrageous that
he would presume to
portray himself as a democrat.
Government leaders are acutely aware that the public
consensus that
favors postponing execution is very fragile. They want
to avoid anything
that might upset it, and evidently fear that his statements
might do so.
Since his arrest nearly a year ago, Mr. Ocalan has
been calling for
reconciliation and asking his guerrillas to lay down
their weapons.
Fighting has died down considerably, and several prominent
politicians
have urged the government to take a new approach to
Kurdish issues.
But none has been so bold as to suggest that Mr. Ocalan
could play a
role in shaping Turkey's political future. That idea
remains an absolute
taboo.
"We cannot allow Ocalan to use Imrali as a political
pulpit," Mr. Ecevit
said, referring to the island prison where he is being
held. "Imrali is not a
podium for speeches. Ocalan has taken to issuing statements
from there
through his lawyers. I want to stress that the Turkish
government cannot
tolerate this."