Australian parliamentarians hail Öcalan as ‘the Nelson Mandela of the 21st Century’
Australian parliamentarians hail Öcalan as ‘the Nelson Mandela of the 21st Century’
- Date: February 20, 2022
- Categories:Rights

- Date: February 20, 2022
- Categories:Rights
Australian parliamentarians hail Öcalan as ‘the Nelson Mandela of the 21st Century’
A group of current and former members of the Australian parliament called for the release of imprisoned PKK leader Abdullah Öcalan on the 23rd anniversary of his illegal arrest in a covert operation by Turkish and US intelligence agencies in Kenya.
Peter Boyle

Jamie Parker MP was joined by fellow NSW Greens MP David Shoebridge, former Australian Senator Lee Rhiannon, Reverend Bill Crews and others in speaking out about this grave injustice.
MP David Shoebridge explained to the gathering:
“Twenty-three years ago, the Turkish government, with the cooperation of the CIA, illegally kidnapped Abdullah Öcalan on a journey that he was making to see Nelson Mandela to speak about universal concepts of self-determination, anti-racism and liberation and for the last 23 years has been illegally detained and jailed in isolation under conditions that amount to torture.
“And what is his crime? His crime is to be a spokesperson for his people. His crime is demanding a right that we should all have – which is a right for any people to determine their own future, determine their own destiny, to control their own communities. Because that is all the Kurdish people have been asking for…
“We are here today to make a number of key demands.
“First, for the Australian government to end the silence on Öcalan’s ongoing inhumane detention and make an immediate demand the release of Öcalan.
“Secondly, for the Australian government to acknowledge that the release of Öcalan is critical for a peaceful resolution for the ongoing conflict. And a peaceful and ongoing resolution with justice for the Kurdish people.
“Öcalan has put before the Turkish government and before the world an outline and a pathway to peace with justice, which frightens the Turkish government and they want to continue to silence Öcalan and the truth about his illegal detention.”
Shoebridge added that the struggle of the Kurdish people was now “more significant than ever” although it faces new threats.
“I want you to know, as my colleague Jamie Parker has said and my colleague Lee Rhiannon has said in the Senate, you have friends and allies in this fight.”
Shoebridge will be seeking election to the Australian Senate in federal elections dues to be held by May this year.
“Wherever politics takes me, we stand with you in the call for justice.”
MP Jamie Parker, who has supported the Kurdish cause for many years, told the speak out that Öcalan was “so important not only for his ideology and the way he has provided leadership to his people and all who are fighting oppression but also because he was a critical piece in a peace process”.
Reverend Crews said that Öcalan “embodied the spirit of freedom” and that is why he was “hated by those who pretend to have power because they really don’t”.
Former Senator Rhiannon voiced her opinion that “more and more people are starting to hear the message that Öcalan is the Nelson Mandela of the 21st century”.
“There are lessons to be learnt from the great anti-Apartheid campaign. It started with very little support, certainly with very few MPs supporting. But it grew and unions came on board all around the world and eventually Nelson Mandela was freed.”
A rally was also held outside the Victorian state Parliament House in Melbourne on February 15 and a car convoy took place in Sydney on February 6. Members of the Kurdish community in Australia and their supporters have also been collecting signatures for a petition to de-list the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) as a terrorist organisation.
Socialist city councillor Sue Bolton told the gathering in Melbourne that the Turkish government thought that by imprisoning Öcalan it would destroy the Kurdish liberation movement, but it had failed. She said the liberation struggle had continued to advance, especially in north and east Syria where it led the Rojava revolution based on the principles of democratic confederalism.
“Democratic confederalism is about giving everyone their rights — not just Kurds but all the other ethnicities — and that is terrifying for the powers that be because the ruling classes have relied on the politics of divide and rule.”
“The PKK does not condone or engage in terrorism – it is a legitimate liberation movement defending the Kurdish people against a well-armed and brutal military force. It poses no threat to Australia or Australians, and has significant support in the Australian community – a support that must be hidden as a consequence of the ban. It was the PKK and its allied militias in northern and eastern Syria who played the leading role, at huge cost, in defeating ISIS territorially, with the support of the US and other Western countries.
“The PKK, like the broader Kurdish freedom movement, stands for participatory democracy, for women’s rights, pluralism and action to protect the environment. It puts these principles into practice wherever it can, and has proved a loyal and able ally in the fight against the real terrorists, ISIS and Turkey’s Islamist stooges – as many US Generals have testified. Yet the Australia Government, like others worldwide, chooses to believe the lies and propaganda of an autocratic, belligerent and corrupt regime in Ankara over these facts.
“Peace in Kurdistan can only come when the PKK is recognised internationally as a legitimate representative of the Kurdish people and its leader Abdullah Öcalan is freed. Australia and Australians should get on the right side of history and do all they can to support these goals.”
*Peter Boyle is a well known journalist and political activist living in Sydney, Australia. He is also a correspondent of the Green Left Journal.
Leave A Comment