MESOPOTAMIA NEWS : Germany bans 2 Kurdish publishing houses over alleged links to PKK

13 Febr 2019  – REUTERS –  BERLIN,— German authorities banned two media organizations it said are linked to the banned Kurdistan Workers party (PKK), considered a terrorist organization by the European Union and Turkey, after raids early on Tuesday. Police searched the Mesopotamia Publishing House and MIR Multimedia in the western states of North Rhine-Westphalia and Lower Saxony and seized material, the interior ministry said.

“As the PKK is still active despite being banned in Germany, it is necessary to rein in the PKK and uphold our legal system,” Interior Minister Horst Seehofer said.

Earnings from the two organizations are funneled exclusively to the PKK and strengthen its capabilities in Germany, the ministry said, adding the two organizations go “under the guise” of publishing houses.With about 14,500 supporters, the PKK is the biggest radical foreign organization in Germany, which is a base for recruitment and refinancing.

The website of Mezopotamien Publishing advertised Kurdish political texts, including by jailed PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan, while the site of MIR Multimedia said it mainly promoted Kurdish music.

Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, in a lingering row with Berlin, has accused Germany of doing too little to crack down on his opponents, including the PKK.Relations between Germany, home to some three million people with a Turkish background including many Kurds, have improved in the last few months after serious tensions over the arrests of German citizens in Turkey and a crackdown on dissent in Ankara after a 2016 failed coup.

Germany, which is home to around 700,000 Kurdish immigrants, outlawed the PKK in 1993.In 2017, Germany has reportedly banned a total of 33 symbols used by Kurdish political and military groups, including the flag of a US ally in Syrian Kurdistan, YPG militia, and a portrait of Turkey’s jailed Kurdish leader Abdullah Ocalan.

Copyright © 2019, respective author or news agency, Ekurd.net | Reuters | AFP