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Interview with Gegham
Manukyan
Interview conducted by Onnik Krikorian, November 1998
Gegham Manukyan is a member of the Central
Committee of the Dashnaktsutiune Armenian Revolutionary Federation in
the Republic of Armenia. He was interviewed during festivities celebrating
the twentieth anniversary of the Kurdistan Workers Party [PKK] organised
by the Yezidi [Kurdish] community in Armenia, and staged at the Russian
Theatre in Yerevan.
OK: Are you here today as an official representative of Dashnaktsutiune?
GM: Yes.
OK: Does this mean
that Dashnaktsutiune considers the Kurdish Question in Turkey is an important
issue, and that Armenians should be concerned with what is occuring to
the Kurds in Turkey?
GM: Armenians must respect
the wishes of any nation that wants to be free, anywhere in the world.
OK: At the moment,
many people are calling Ocalan a terrorist, and the PKK a terrorist organisation.
Are you worried that you might be supporting an organisation that many
are calling terrorist?
GM: No leader who wishes
his nation to be free can be considered a terrorist, and those that consider
Ocalan a terrorist, are actually the terrorists themselves - the Turkish
leaders are involved with the mafia - and I think that in time people
will consider Ocalan similar to Arafat. He was once considered a terrorist,
and now he has been awarded prizes for peace.
OK: And interesting
too, because Dashnaktsutiune itself was considered a terrorist organisation
[Dro]. in Armenia. Perhaps "terrorist" is just a political label?
GM: Yes. I was in prison
for three years. Do I look like a terrorist? [laughs].
It will be better when
the Kurdish problem is solved not through force, but through political
dialogue, and I am sure that this will happen now.
OK: I have been following
closely the events in Italy [Ocalan's arrival]. It seems inevitable that
people will have to realise the importance of negotiating some form of
autonomy for the Kurds in Turkey. However, if the Kurds do get some form
of autonomy in southeast Turkey how do you feel as an Armenian when you
consider that some of this land is considered historically Armenian?
GM: It is a problem between
the Kurds and Armenians, but we can solve this problem. We are discussing
it already. According to Ocalan an agreement is possible.
OK: I came here in
June to look at the Yezidi minority in Armenia. The community is split
- some Yezidi consider themselves Kurdish and support the PKK, whilst
the others are trying to define themselves most definitely as not being
Kurds. Are you aware of this split, and that the Kurds in the hall today
are mainly Yezidi Kurds - perhaps there are only one or two Moslem Kurds
from Turkey?
GM: This is a very complicated
question - a matter of ethnology - about the origins of the Yezidi and
the Kurds. Only on a scientific level can this be solved, but everybody
should be free to decide to call themselves either Kurd or Yezidi.
OK: It is Interesting
because it appears that all of the Yezidi outside of Armenia consider
themselves Kurdish, and the division only seems to exist in Armenia. The
allegation is that the division was promoted during the Ter-Petrossian
years for whatever reasons. It is still open to debate as to what exactly
those reasons were - in response to Turkish accusations of Armenian support
of the PKK, fear of Kurdish nationalism, or just ignorance - I don't know.
Whatever the reasons, there is no mistaking the fact that the Yezidi speak
Kurmanji [Kurdish], and I noticed that at the end of your address to the
audience so did you.
GM: [laughs] I learnt
Kurdish in prison. I was in prison in Armenia with three Kurds. They were
refugees from Iraq, they travelled to Iran, and from Iran, through Nakhichevan.
They were arrested and imprisoned in Armenia. They taught me Kurdish.
OK: Kocharian has
already stated that Ocalan would not be allowed political asylum in Armenia,
and some people are concerned about PKK activities here. What response
do you have to these concerns?
GM: The PKK has representatives in many countries.
Most of these conserns are as a result of Turkish propaganda, and it is
absurd to suggest that there are PKK military bases in Armenia.
END
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