HDP will not facilitate presidency: Demirtaş
Deniz Zeyrek ANKARA
‘If we support the presidency, then we would be giving our 40-year-old effort as a gift to Erdoğan,’ HDP’s Demirtaş (3rd R) said as part of the ‘leaders’ gathering.
The outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party’s (PKK) jailed leader Abdullah
Öcalan and the Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) reject the presidential
system, the latter’s co-chair Selahattin Demirtaş has said, stressing
that such a move would mean putting all the fruits of the Kurdish
movement’s labor at the service of President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.
Demirtaş
dismissed claims that Öcalan has a deal with Erdoğan on the
presidential system in return for meeting the PKK leader’s demands.
“The
system that we defend and the system which the president defends are
opposite. It’s not possible to implement them at the same time.
Therefore, we cannot reconcile and cannot agree. If we support the
presidency, then we would be giving our 40-year-old effort as a gift to
Erdoğan,” Demirtaş said.
Daily Hürriyet hosted Demirtaş and
others as part of the second “leaders’ gathering” at the daily, with the
participation of board chair Vuslat Doğan Sabancı, Editor-in-Chief
Sedat Ergin, as well as columnists Taha Akyol, Ertuğrul Özkök and Ahmet
Hakan.
The HDP opposed not only the presidency of Erdoğan, but also PM Ahmet Davutoğlu, Demirtaş said.
“How
can we sacrifice a party for the sake of Erdoğan’s presidency after we
brought ourselves to these days with all these efforts? If we use this
opportunity in a partisan way, we would be using such big credit to buy
something small,” he said.
The presidential system is not being
discussed properly in Turkey at the moment because Erdoğan and the AKP
are dictating a model, according to Demirtaş.
If Turkey were
seeking a model and the AKP suggested one, then that model could be
discussed, but the current proposal by the president is “dangerous” for
Turkey, he said.
The HDP has not made either an open or closed
commitment with the AKP, but the ruling party could have pressured the
HDP to convince it on the presidency, he said.
Demirtaş said his
party’s priority was gender equality. “If we can resolve this issue,
then all domination issues in society and state mechanisms will also be
positively affected.”
Citing the party’s deputy candidate from
Muğla, Demirtaş said his party would run more women with headscarves in
other provinces.
With the success of the HDP, parliament will
see the highest number of woman lawmakers in the history of the Turkish
Republic, Demirtaş said, noting that his party’s stance on women’s
issues also displayed the HDP’s attitude on secularism.
“The HDP is the only party practicing secularism,” he added.
His
party aims to catch the wind which the AKP took advantage of in 2002,
Demirtaş said. “The AKP promised freedom, but they have made efforts
only for the freedom of conservatives, and they have lost sincerity,” he
said.
The HDP co-chair pledged to bring freedom to all
identities in Turkey. “Both Turkish politics and Kurdish politics should
change,” he said, engaging in some self-criticism. “In the past, we
also made similar politics. Even that brought success. But, with such
politics, we were stuck on 7 percent,” Demirtaş said, adding that his
party had decided to fix its mistakes.
The party will ultimately
displace the AKP, he said, adding their target was the AKP, not the
main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP).
Demirtaş also
warned against possible provocations before the June 7 elections, adding
that his efforts might not be enough to prevent all provocations.