Chapter 2 The Listing

Chapter 2 The Listing

The criteria for listing an organisation
The listing of the PKK
Conclusion

The criteria for listing an organisation

2.1

To be specified as a terrorist organisation for the purposes of paragraph (b) of the definition of terrorist organisation in section 102.1 of the Criminal Code, the Minister:

must be satisfied on reasonable grounds that the organisation: (a) is directly or indirectly engaged in, preparing, planning, assisting in or fostering the doing of a terrorist act (whether or not the terrorist act has occurred or will occur); or

(b) advocates the doing of a terrorist act (whether or not a terrorist act has occurred or will occur).1

2.2

At the hearing on 1 February 2005 for the Review of the listing of six terrorist organisations, the Director-General of ASIO advised the Committee of ASIO’s evaluation process in selecting entities for proscription under the Criminal Code.  Some of the factors included:

  • engagement in terrorism;
  • ideology and links to other terrorist groups or networks;
  • links to Australia;
  • threat to Australian interests;
  • proscription by the UN or like-minded countries; and
  • engagement in peace or mediation processes.2
  • 2.3

    These factors are not legal criteria; they are used by ASIO in their evaluations. Each factor may be accorded a different weighting according to the evaluation taking place. The Committee has, since February 2005, used these factors as the basis for testing the listings which it has reviewed. The Committee has decided to use these factors in testing the current re-listing.

     

    The listing of the PKK

    2.4

    The Attorney-General informed the Committee of the proposed listing by letter dated 18 September 2007 with an attached statement of reasons.  On 27 September 2007, the Attorney-General issued a media release announcing the decision to list the PKK.

    2.5

    The Attorney-General’s statement of reasons is as follows:

    (Also known as: Peoples Congress of Kurdistan, Kongra Gel, Kongra Gele Kurdistan, Partiya Karkeren Kurdistan, New PKK, Freedom and Democratic Congress of Kurdistan, Kurdistan Freedom and Democracy Congress, KADEK, Kurdistan Halk Kongresi (KHK), Kurdistan Labor Party, Kurdistan People’s Congress, Kurdish Freedom Falcons, Kurdish Liberation Hawks, Kurdistan Ozgurluk Sahinleri, Teyrbazln Azadiya Kurdistan (TAK.)

    The following information is based on publicly available details about the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK).  These details have been corroborated by material from intelligence investigations into the activities of the PKK and by official reporting.  ASIO assesses that the details set out below are accurate and reliable.

    The Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) is listed as a proscribed terrorist organisation by the governments of the United Kingdom and Canada.  The organisation is proscribed by the government of the United States under the name of Kongra Gel.  The PKK is listed by the European Union for the purposes of its anti-terrorism measures.

    Current Status of the PKK
    The PKK is Kurdish separatist organisation founded in Turkey by Abdullah Ocalan in 1974.  The organisation initially presented itself as part of the communist revolution.  To increase popular support from the Kurdish community, the PKK began to adopt Islamic beliefs in the late 1980s. However the organisation remains predominantly secular. During the 1980s and early 1990s, the PKK was responsible for numerous attacks on Turkish security forces and civilians, including foreign tourists.  Following Ocalan’s arrest by Turkish authorities in February 1999 the group announced a unilateral ceasefire in September 1999. Despite this, PKK attacks continued.

    The PKK changed its name to the Congress for Freedom and Democracy in Kurdistan (KADEK) in April 2002, claiming the PKK had accomplished its mission. KADEK announced its dissolution in October 2003 and re-formed as Kongra Gel. The armed wing of KADEK, known as the Peoples’ Defence Forces (HPG), remained active. In early 2004 Kongra Gel split, with militants taking control of the organisation when others broke away to form a new political party. In April 2005, Kongra Gel reverted to the name Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) or the ‘New’ PKK. However, not all elements of the organisation have reverted to the name PKK.

    PKK front groups, including the Kurdistan Freedom Falcons (TAK), claim responsibility for attacks against civilians. In reality the PKK directs these operations. These groups are created to give plausible deniability for attacks against civilians. The military wing of the PKK, the HPG is also controlled by the PKK leadership and is not distinguishable from the PKK.

    The PKK periodically announces ceasefires. During these periods, attacks by the PKK decline in number but do not cease.  Continued clashes with the Turkish security forces and attacks during ceasefire periods indicate ceasefires are not recognised or adhered to by either side.  Ceasefires were announced by the group in October 2006 and again in June 2007. However PKK attacks have continued, including the 22 May 2007 suicide bombing in Ankara, the 15 June 2007 bombing in Diyarbakir and the 23 June 2007 suicide attack against a police station.

    Objectives
    The PKK's aims and objectives have evolved over time. Intially the group aimed to establish a Kurdish nation separate from Turkey, Syria, Iraq and Iran. The organisation now calls for autonomy for Kurds within Turkey and seeks to promote and advance the rights of Kurds living in Turkey, specifically the right to maintain ethnic identity. The PKK exhibits a willingness to use violence in order to achieve these objectives.

    Leadership and membership
    Abdullah Ocalan, currently serving life imprisonment in Turkey, is still considered the leader and figure-head of the PKK. In practice the PKK is run by Murat Karayilan. Although the organisation has undergone numerous name changes, there is a continuity of key leaders, including Abdullah Ocalan, Cemil Bayik and Murat Karayilan .

    PKK membership is estimated at approximately 5000, predominantly based in northern Iraq and south-eastern Turkey. The PKK maintains camps in northern Iraq where military and weapons training are provided. PKK funding is generated largely through criminal activity, including extortion and smuggling, and from the fundraising activities within Kurdish communities worldwide Some money is also raised through the sale of publications.

    Terrorist activities
    Recent terrorist activities ascribed to the PKK, or for which it has claimed responsibility, include:

    Conclusion
    The Criminal Code provides that for an organisation to be listed as a terrorist organisation the Attorney General must be satisfied that:

    2.6

    On the basis of the statement of reasons, submissions, assessments by the US State Department, Jane’s Terrorism and Insurgency Centre database, other open source intelligence, news reports and evidence given at the hearing, the PKK has been measured against ASIO’s stated evaluation process as follows.

    Engagement in terrorism

    2.7

    The statement of reasons lists a number of the violent acts in the period 2006 to 2007 ascribed to or claimed by the PKK, the most recent being in June 2007.  In addition Jane’s Terrorism and Insurgency Centre notes the following attacks:

    2.8

    The Committee considered submissions from the Kurdish Association of Victoria, Australian Tamil Rights Advocacy Council and the Federation of Community Legal Centres (Vic) Inc. These did not offer any evidence that the PKK has either renounced violence against civilian targets or has re-entered into a peace process.

    2.9

    These submissions4 referred to issues of self determination of the Kurdish people. In its previous report5 the Committee discussed at length the historical background to the Kurdish problem and issues relating to terrorism, self determination and minority rights. Whilst being sensitive to the history of the Kurdish people the Committee reiterates that acts of terrorism, particularly where innocent civilians are targeted, are unacceptable to Australia and the international community.

    Ideology and links to other terrorist groups/networks

    Ideology

    2.10

    Established in 1974,6 the PKK’s immediate objectives:

     . . . are greater cultural and political rights for Turkey’s Kurdish minority, including the amendment of the Turkish constitution to include and explicit recognition of a Kurdish identity, a comprehensive amnesty for PKK militants, including allowing the organisation’s leadership to participate in political activities in Turkey, and an easing of the conditions of imprisoned PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan leading eventually to his release.7

    2.11

    As a Marxist organisation, it was and remains a predominantly secular organisation.  However, the statement of reasons notes that ‘(T)o increase popular support from the Kurdish community, the PKK began to adopt Islamic beliefs in the late 1980s.’

    2.12

    The PKK claims to have 10,000 fighters.  The statement of reasons, however, numbers the members of the PKK at 5,000, mostly located in northern Iraq.  Both the US State Department and Jane’s agree, suggesting membership of 4,000 to 5,000.  However, the number of sympathisers in Turkey and in Europe, where there are 700,000 Kurds, is said to be in the many thousands.  Jane’s notes that in March 2003 about 15,000 Kurds marched in Frankfurt in solidarity with Kurds in Turkey and Northern Iraq and calling for the release of Ocalan.8

    Links to other terrorist groups

    2.13 The Attorney-General’s statement of reasons reports no links to other groups.  In its 2004 report on the PKK Jane’s claims that the PKK maintains relations with Sri Lanka’s Liberation Tigers of Tamil Ealam (LTTE), the Palestinian Hamas organisation, Greece’s November 17, the Armenian Secret Army for the Liberation of Armenia and the Red Army Faction.9 Sri Lankan Prime Minister Ratnasiri Wickremanayaka has alleged that the Tamil Tigers maintain links with international terror groups such as the PKK.10 The Committee could find no corroborative evidence of this.

    Links to Australia

    2.14

    No links between Australia and the PKK are mentioned in the statement of reasons.  The Committee understands that a direct link to Australia is not legally necessary in order for an organisation to be listed under the Criminal Code.  However, ASIO has advised the Committee that it is one of the factors that it considers in deciding whether to list an organisation.

    2.15

    ASIO gave evidence to the Committee on the PKK’s fundraising activities and highlighted the difficulty in showing that particular funds might be flowing from Australia to the PKK:

    We do not see someone out waving a flag, with a tray, seeking handouts for the PKK. We do see charity groups raising funding within the Kurdish community in Australia. Often people who are contributing money to those associations and charities are not aware that this money is being redirected by the PKK.11

    2.16

    On 21 December 2001, Australia listed the PKK (and Kongra Gel on 4 May 2004) on the DFAT Consolidated List.  The consequence of this listing is that it is illegal to deal with the organisation’s assets or to make assets available to it.

    2.17

    At the hearings, the Committee asked witnesses whether any action had been taken as a result of this listing.  The Committee was advised that there have been no prosecutions over the provision of funds to the PKK.

    Threat to Australian interests

    2.18

    The Attorney-General’s statement of reasons is silent on the question of whether the PKK threatens Australian interests.  Australian interests have been defined for the Committee in previous reviews in terms of threats of harm to Australians travelling into the area of operation of a terrorist organisation or dangers to Australian businesses or trade in such places or threats to Australians in Australia.

    2.19

    The response of witnesses to the Committee’s questions regarding the threat to Australia’s security from the PKK was similar to previous views put to the Committee on this question: that there are indiscriminate attacks in Turkey, that:

     . . . when the PKK talks about including tourists and Western tourists specifically as targets that then encapsulates the large numbers of Australians who travel there.12

    2.20

    There have been no attacks on Australian businesses either deliberately targeting or inadvertantly affecting Australian business in Turkey.

    2.21

    There is also an unspecified level of tourism to Turkey, as increasing numbers of Australians have travelled to Turkey to visit Gallipoli in recent years.  The Department of Foreign Affairs provides advice to Australians travelling to Turkey which says, without specifying the PKK, that the threat level in Turkey is high:

    Proscription by the UN or like-minded countries

    2.22

    The PKK has not been listed by the United Nations (UN) 1267 Committee.

    2.23

    According to the State Department, the United States Government designated the PKK as a Foreign Terrorist Organisation (FTO) under the Immigration and Nationality Act on 8 October 1997. It has added the name Kongra Gel to the listing. 14 On January 10, 2008 the United States designated the Kurdistan Freedom Falcons (TAK) as a Specially Designated Global Terrorist.15

    2.24

    Canada listed the PKK on 11 December 2002 under the Criminal Code Act.  The United Kingdom listed the PKK under the Terrorism Act 2000.

    2.25

    The Kurdish Association of Victoria referred to the 3 April 2008 decision of the European Court of First Instance, relating to decisions taken by the EU Council of Ministers, to include the Kongra-Gel/PKK on the EU’s terrorist list.

    2.26

    The Committee has considered the 3 April 2008 decision of the European Court of First Instance, and has sought and received advice from the Attorney-General’s Department on the detail of this matter.  The Attorney-General’s Department has advised:

    The Court of First Instance annulled the EU’s decision to include Kongra Gel on the EU’s terrorist list for the purposes of asset freezing, as the EU had not provided reasons to support the inclusion of Kongra-Gel on the list at this time, or shortly after, the listing decision was made.

    The PKK was not a party to the proceedings and the Court made no specific ruling with respect to the PKK.

    …[however] the EU Council Secretariat told the Australian Embassy in Brussels that the Court’s decision would have no practical impact as the EU’s current listing of the PKK/Kongra-Gel was based on an EU regulation made in December 2007 (whereas the Court only annulled the 2001 decision). The EU regulation listing both the PKK and its aliases, Kongra-Gel and KADEK, would therefore remain unaffected.16

    2.27

    The submission from the Kurdish Association of Victoria stated that:

     . . . we would like to inform you that about a month ago the European Court of First Instance in Luxembourg annulled the EU decision to list the PKK as a terrorist organisation. The lawsuit was reportedly backed by Britain.17

    2.28

    This may be interpreted as implying that the UK supported the PKK in the lawsuit against the EU. Such a view is incorrect. The Council of the EU were joined by United Kingdom and Ireland in defending the suit brought by Kongra-Gel.

    Engagement in peace/mediation processes

    2.29

    Since the capture of Abdullah Ocalan in 1999, the overtures of the Turkish Government for EU membership and the war in Iraq, there has been considerable change in the activities of the PKK and the response of the Turkish Government and the security forces.  A ceasefire was called for by the gaoled leader of the PKK in 1999 and appears to have had some effect up to June 2004 when the ceasefire was formally ended.18

    2.30

    The level of Kurdish attacks since the breakdown in the ceasefire and the Turkish cross-border raids suggest to the Committee that it will be some time before the appropriate political environment exists for a renewal of the peace process.

    Conclusion

    2.31 The Committee found that the PKK continues to engage in activities that satisfy section 102.1 of the Criminal Code. The Committee does not recommend disallowance of the regulation.
     

    Recommendation 1

    The Committee does not recommend the disallowance of the regulation made to proscribe the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK).

     

    The Hon Arch Bevis MP

    Chairman


    Footnotes

    1 Subsection 102.1(2) of Division 102, Subdivision A of the Criminal Code. Back
    2

    Confidential exhibit, ASIO, tabled 1 February 2005. Back

    3 Jane’s Terrorism and Insurgency Centre, Workers’ Party of Kurdistan (PKK) , 12 November 2007, http://jtic.janes.com , p. 3. Back
    4 See Kurdish Association of Victoria, Submission No. 5, p. 1, Australian Tamil Rights Advocacy Council, Submission 6, p 1-2, Federation of Community Legal Centres (Vic) Inc, Submission No. 7, p. 5. Back
    5 Joint Parliamentary Committee on Intelligence and Security, Review of the listing of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), April 2006, p. 19 – 21. Back
    6 The organisation was founded in 1974 but was named the PKK in 1978. Jane's Terrorism and Insurgency Centre, Workers’ Party of Kurdistan (PKK) , 12 November 2007, http://jtic.janes.com , p. 1. Back
    7 Jane’s Terrorism and Insurgency Centre, Workers’ Party of Kurdistan (PKK) , 12 November 2007, http://jtic.janes.com, p. 1. Back
    8 Jane’s Terrorism and Insurgency Centre, Workers’ Party of Kurdistan (PKK) , 12 November 2007, http://jtic.janes.com, p. 4. Back
    9 Jane’s Terrorism and Insurgency Centre, Workers’ Party of Kurdistan (PKK) , 25 April 2004, http://jtic.janes.com, p. 6. Back
    10 http://www.financialexpress.com/news/LTTE-has-links-with-intl-terror-groups-Lanka-PM/288142/ (accessed 27 March 2008) Back
    11 Classified transcript, private hearing 20 March 2008, p. 4. Back
    12 Classified transcript, private hearing 20 March 2008, p. 3. Back
    13 http://www.smartraveller.gov.au/zw-cgi/view/Advice/Turkey (accessed 26/03/2008) Back
    14 http://www.state.gov/s/ct/rls/fs/2004/40945.htm Back
    15 http://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/2008/jan/99128.htm Back
    16 ommittee correspondence from Attorney-General’s Department, 8 May 2008. Back
    17 Kurdish Association of Victoria, Submission No. 5, p. 2 (emphasis added). Back
    18 See paragraph 2.25. Back



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