Kurdish MP on hunger strike in Turkey jail gets release order
Leyla Guven still faces trial and up to 31 years’ jail over charges of terrorism leadership and propaganda for her opposition to Turkey’s incursion into northwest Syria’s Afrin region.
The judge in the largely Kurdish city of Diyarbakir released Guven as she had already been in custody for a year. Her health has deteriorated during a 79-day hunger strike to protest against the prison isolation of Kurdish militant leader Abdullah Ocalan, those close to her say.
“This is a bittersweet joy for us,” Guven’s daughter, Sabiha Temizkan, told Reuters, saying her mother would continue her hunger strike despite her release.
“I hope her demand will be met and her hunger strike will be finished before it does damage to her,” Temizkan said.
Guven, wearing a surgical mask, made a victory sign from inside an ambulance after her release.
She has been consuming water with sugar, salt
Guven was among some 600 people detained over social media posts and protests
Last June, Guven was elected to parliament as
Guven is also co-leader of the Democratic Society Congress (DTK), an umbrella group of civil society
Jailed militant Ocalan is head of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), which has fought an insurgency in southeast Turkey since 1984 and is designated a terrorist group by Turkey, the United States