Jailed PKK chief stresses ‘strong’ commitment to peace process

(AFP/File)
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Updated 03 December 2025
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Jailed PKK chief stresses ‘strong’ commitment to peace process

  • “This process is a process of ensuring the participation of Kurds in the (Turkish) republic through legal means,” Ocalan said
  • “I would like to reiterate our strong will and resolute stance with respect to this process”

ISTANBUL: Jailed PKK founder Abdullah Ocalan stressed his determination to see through ongoing peace efforts with Turkiye, while urging Ankara to finalize the legal groundwork for the process in remarks published Wednesday.
His comments came more than six months after the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) formally renounced its armed struggle against Turkiye, after four decades of violence that claimed some 50,000 lives on both sides.
“This process is a process of ensuring the participation of Kurds in the (Turkish) republic through legal means and building a democratic republic with the broadest social unity,” Ocalan said in a message released through a delegation from the pro-Kurdish DEM party who visited him a day earlier.
“I would like to reiterate our strong will and resolute stance with respect to this process.”
Ocalan, 76, has led the peace process from his cell on Imrali prison island near Istanbul, where he has been held in solitary confinement since 1999.
His remarks came just days after a senior PKK commander told AFP the group would take no further steps in the peace process until Turkiye frees Ocalan, whom his followers refer to as “Apo.”
“All the steps the leader Apo has initiated have been implemented... there will be no further actions taken,” commander Amed Malazgirt told AFP on Saturday in a bunker in the Qandil mountains in northern Iraq.
“From now on, we will be waiting for the Turkish state and they have to be the one taking steps,” he said.


Famine spreading to two more areas of Sudan’s Darfur: UN-backed experts

Updated 58 min 27 sec ago
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Famine spreading to two more areas of Sudan’s Darfur: UN-backed experts

  • Famine is spreading to two more areas of Sudan’s North Darfur after the paramilitary takeover of state capital El-Fasher

PORT SUDAN: Famine is spreading to two more areas of Sudan’s North Darfur after the paramilitary takeover of state capital El-Fasher triggered mass displacement into surrounding communities, UN-backed experts said on Thursday.
In an alert issued by the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC), global food security experts warned that “famine thresholds for acute malnutrition have now been surpassed” in the areas of Um Baru and Kernoi, near the border with Chad.
They added that the spread of famine came as the fall of El-Fasher led to “massive displacement of residents and displaced persons into surrounding areas of North Darfur.”