BY SEYHMUS CAKAN
A prominent Kurdish lawyer and rights activist
was shot in the head and killed on Saturday, in an incident likely to fuel
further unrest in Turkey's mostly Kurdish southeast.
The pro-Kurdish HDP Party called the killing of
Tahir Elci a "planned assassination" and urged people to protest.
Videos from the scene showed a gun battle in the street, in which two policemen
died, and Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said it was unclear whether Elci was
caught in crossfire or assassinated.
If it was the latter, he said, the target was
clear. "The target is Turkey. It's an attack on peace and harmony in
Turkey."
President Tayyip Erdogan said the shooting,
which took place in the southeastern city of Diyarbakir, showed Turkey was
right in "its determination to fight terrorism".
Elci was facing trial for saying the banned
Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) was not a terrorist organization, as the
government describes it. He had, however, denounced PKK violence.
Hundreds of people have been killed since a
ceasefire between the PKK and Turkish security forces collapsed in July,
reigniting a conflict in which some 40,000 people have died since it began in
1984.
Kurdish forces are fighting Islamic State in
both Iraq and Syria, making them an important ally of the United States against
the militants -- something Turkey fears could embolden its own Kurdish
minority.
Hours after Elci's death, police fired tear gas
and water cannon to disperse hundreds of people marching in Istanbul to protest
against the killing. The marchers chanted: "Shoulder to shoulder against
fascism," and "Tahir Elci is immortal."
"SPRAYED WITH BULLETS"
Witnesses said Elci had been shot after speaking
to journalists about a historic minaret which had been damaged in clashes days
before.
"The moment the statement ended, the crowd
was sprayed with bullets," a local HDP party official, Omer Tastan, told
Reuters.
"A single bullet struck Elci in the
head," he said, adding that 11 people had also been wounded in the
incident.
Despite videos of the shooting from several
angles, the sequence of events was unclear.
Reuters TV footage showed plain clothes police
repeatedly shooting at a figure running past them towards Elci. He was then
seen lying on the ground with blood apparently streaming from his head. Another
video published by local media of the same scene showed two men running past
police, who shot at them.
Police surveillance camera footage showed a
large yellow cab arriving at the scene and policemen running towards it. Shots
were fired from inside the cab as one of them opened the door, and two
policemen fell to the ground as the passengers ran away.
Turkish news stations said one of the policemen
died at the scene and the other later in the evening.
At a news conference, Interior Minister Efkan
Ala said a gun battle erupted after someone shot at police from an unidentified
car.
"Tahir Elci was caught up in fire between
police and terrorists," he said, without saying whether anyone had been
arrested.
Privately owned Dogan News Agency reported two
police officers were wounded when an investigative team, including Diyarbakir's
chief prosecutor, visited the site and came under fire.
"STRUGGLE FOR JUSTICE"
The pro-Kurdish HDP, whose initials stand for
Peoples' Democratic Party, called a demonstration in Istanbul.
"In the place left by Tahir Elci, thousands
more Tahir Elcis will carry on the work in the struggle for law and
justice," it said in a statement.
The HDP said Elci had been targeted by the
ruling AK party and its media, and called for political parties, civil society
and professional groups to "raise their voices" in protest.
The Diyarbakir governor's office declared a
curfew in the area after the incident. Interior minister Ala said four
investigators would be assigned to the case, and he and the justice minister
expressed their condolences.
The U.S. embassy expressed its shock over Elci's
death, calling him on Twitter a "courageous defender of human
rights".
Emma Sinclair-Webb, senior researcher at
U.S.-based Human Rights Watch, said: "This is a very dark day for Turkey –
the murder of Tahir Elci is a devastating blow not only to human rights
activists but to all who want to see justice and rule of law prevail in
Turkey."
Turkey, the United States and the European Union
classify the PKK, which is demanding greater autonomy for Turkey's Kurds, as a
terrorist organization.
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