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21-12-00-ap-tky-prison
Turkey Vows to Crush Defiant
Inmates, Some 150 Surrender
Dec 21, 2000
ANKARA, Turkey (AP) -- Left-wing prisoners defied a call to surrender
Thursday, vowing
to fight until "death or victory" as soldiers lobbed tear gas grenades
through holes drilled in
the roof in an attempt to end a three-day prison siege.
The 435 prisoners in an Istanbul prison are the last group to hold out
after 158 prisoners in
another penitentiary gave up Thursday afternoon.
Soldiers found guns, computers and mobile phones in some recently captured
prison wards,
and some Turks began to question how their country allowed radical
inmates so much power
inside prison walls.
Also Thursday, parliament overrode a presidential veto and passed an
amnesty bill that will
free half of Turkey's 72,000 prisoners. The amnesty will not apply
to prisoners who opposed
the state, such as Islamic, Kurdish or leftist militants.
Turkey mobilized 5,000 soldiers and assaulted 20 prisons Tuesday to
end a two-month
hunger strike by left-wing inmates and regain control over the communal
wards.
Inmates launched their hunger strike to protest plans to move them into
prisons with one- or
three-person cells, where they say they would be more vulnerable to
abuse.
The bodies of two prisoners were discovered after the surrender at Canakkale
prison in
western Turkey. Another inmate died at the hospital, raising the three-day
death toll to 18
prisoners and two soldiers. Ozgur Tayad, a prisoners' support group,
said the toll was much
higher but gave no figures.
CNN-Turk television, citing early autopsy reports, said five inmates
were killed by gunfire
and one choked to death from tear gas while seven others burned to
death. Authorities were
not available to confirm the television report.
Prisoners resisted the soldiers' assault with guns and flame-throwers
made from gas canisters
and rubber tubing. At Canakkale prison, inmates had barricaded themselves
inside a
gymnasium and ran a live wire to the door to electrocute soldiers who
tried to open it.
Thursday morning, helicopters hovered over Canakkale prison and Istanbul's
Umraniye
prison. Through megaphones, soldiers tried to persuade prisoners to
surrender, shouting,
"Life is beautiful" and "If you are not thinking of yourselves, think
of your parents waiting
in front of the prison," the daily Milliyet reported.
Soldiers used sledgehammers to smash through the prison roof and fired
tear gas canisters
inside. Firefighters poured foam onto the inmates to prevent them from
setting themselves
ablaze or using makeshift flame-throwers.
Some 158 prisoners surrendered, ending the standoff at Canakkale.
At Umraniye, security forces fired tear gas into holes through the roof
and were apparently
closing in on 435 prisoners who had barricaded themselves inside of
a conference room,
Anatolia said. Inmates ignored calls to surrender, shouting "Either
death or victory."
Political groups frequently run their own prison wards -- which house
up to 100 inmates.
Prisoners smuggle in cellular telephones and weapons by bribing or
threatening guards,
some of whom earn only $250 a month.
Turkish newspapers have been filled with pictures from before the assault
showing prisoners
living in wards decorated with rebel banners. In some cases, rebels
wearing red headbands
were seen lining up and giving clenched-fist salutes to their leaders.
In one instance, rebels
tore down the walls of a ward so that male and female prisoners could
live together.
Many of the leftist inmates are linked to the Revolutionary People's
Liberation Army-Front,
a group that aims to establish a Marxist republic in Turkey. The group
has claimed
responsibility for the assassinations of generals, policemen and government
officials and has
targeted U.S. military and diplomatic missions.
********************
The
Kurdistan Observer
www.kurdistanobserver.com
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