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Vedat Aydın

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Vedat Aydın
Born1953
Died7 July 1991 (aged 37–38)
Cause of deathMurder
Body discoveredMaden, Elazığ
Resting placeDiyarbakir
NationalityKurdish
CitizenshipTurkish
OccupationLawyer
Political partyHEP
SpouseSükran Aydın

Vedat Aydın (1953 – 7 July 1991) was a Kurdish politician in Turkey and human rights defender. He was married to Sükran Aydın.

Early life and education

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He was born in 1953 in the village of Kazancı in Bismil District of Diyarbakir Province.[1][2] He graduated from the Literary department of the Vocational School in Diyarbakir in 1979. [1] He became a founding member and delegate of the Diyarbakir branch of the Turkish Human Rights Association (IHD).[3]

Kurdish rights activist

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At the annual meeting of the IHD in October 1990, he gave the first public speech in Kurdish language in Turkey, which was forbidden.[3] The decision to make the speech in Kurdish was taken by the Kurdish delegates, but caught others by surprise.[4] Many other non-Kurdish delegates left the congress in protest while Aydin kept on with his speech, which was translated by Ahmet Zeki Okçuoglu into Turkish.[3] Aydin was detained and arrested in Ulucanlar prison, Ankara.[1] After his release he was elected the head of the People's Labor Party (HEP) in Diyarbakir.[3]

Assassination

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He was killed in July 1991. On 5 July, armed men identifying themselves as police officers showed up at his home and forced him into a car. On 7 July his body was found under a bridge just outside the boundaries of the province Diyarbakir, in the Maden district of the province of Elazıĝ.[5] He was immediately buried at the Maden Municipality, but later an autopsy was done and after it was confirmed the body belonged to Aydın, he was reburied in Diyarbakir. His skull was fractured, his legs broken and about 15 bullets were shot in his body. 8 bullets were found in his body. No one was charged for the murder of Vedat Aydin. At his funeral in Diyarbakir on 10 July, the police fired live ammunition into a crowd of thousands of mourning people. The police claimed stones were thrown from within the crowd, eyewitnesses denied this, though.[6][7] As a result, 7[6] to 13 people were killed[8] and up to 100 people were injured. Protests against these events took place in the next days Diyarbakir, Nusaybin, Lice, Uludere and Bismil.[9] Nobody was charged with the killing of the attendants of the funeral cortege. On 4 December 1993 a delegation of DEP parliamentarians came under an armed attack as they were on a mission in Batman trying to find out who killed Aydın. As a result, the MP for Mardin Mehmet Sincar and the local party leader of Batman were killed and MP for Batman Nizamettin Toğuç was injured together with three others.[10] The investigation into the murder of Vedat Aydın went on, but in the year 2009, 18 years after his murder, a court in Malatya decided to close the investigation about the murder of Aydin and returned the file to Diyarbakir due to lack of jurisdiction.[5]

References

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  1. ^ a b c "Vedat Aydın is living inside the hearts of the Kurdish people". Medya News. 5 July 2021. Retrieved 16 June 2022.
  2. ^ "Bir dervişin hayatı: Vedat Aydın" (in Turkish). 15 November 2020. Retrieved 2 June 2023.
  3. ^ a b c d Kurban, Dilek (2020), Kurban, Dilek (ed.), "Bottom-up: Kurdish Legal Mobilization at the ECtHR", Limits of Supranational Justice: The European Court of Human Rights and Turkey's Kurdish Conflict, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 191–192, ISBN 978-1-108-48932-4, retrieved 16 June 2022
  4. ^ Kurban, Dilek (2020), p.191
  5. ^ a b Erol Önderoğlu (17 September 2009). "VEDAT AYDIN MURDER: Murder File Returned to its Origin after 18 Years". Bianet – Bagimsiz Iletisim Agi.
  6. ^ a b "HSW". www.hrw.org. Retrieved 17 March 2019.
  7. ^ "Wife of slain Kurdish politician Vedat Aydin says husband killed by Turkish intelligence JITEM". ekurd.net. 2 March 2010.
  8. ^ "Mahmut Kaya: Widerstand ist legitim". ANF News (in German). Retrieved 17 March 2019.
  9. ^ Orhan, Mehmet (2016). Political violence and Kurds in Turkey. Routledge. p. 184. ISBN 9781315688206.
  10. ^ Gunes, Cengiz (11 January 2013). The Kurdish National Movement in Turkey: From Protest to Resistance. Routledge. p. 163. ISBN 9781136587986.