May 2016
Volume: 4, No: 1, pp. 51 – 77
ISSN: 2051-4883
e-ISSN: 2051-4891
www.KurdishStudies.net
Article history: Received 2 March 2015; accepted 28 December 2015
Mapping action and identity in the
Kobani crisis response Thomas McGee
Abstract
This article compares humanitarian operations associated with Turkish state and pro-Kurdish
movement actors in response to the large cross-border displacement of Kurdish-Syrians into
Turkey from the September 2014 Kobani crisis. Analysis draws on actor mapping
methodologies and fieldwork conducted in the Kurdish-majority town of Suruç in southern
Turkey. Parallels with the 2011 Van earthquakes highlight the ethno-national complexities and
potential controversy encountered when responding to humanitarian needs of predominantly
Kurdish populations in Turkey. The alternative territorial identities generated by practices of
Kurdish municipal-level “governmentality” (through camp management and humanitarian
assistance) trouble the assumed hierarchy between Turkish state authorities and Kurdish
challengers.
Keywords: Kobani displacement; humanitarian action; Suruç; Turkey
Bi nexşekirina çalakî û nasnameyan di hewldanên qeyrana Kobanî de
Ev gotar wan hewl û çalakiyên mirovî yên dewleta tirk û akterên hereketa kurdî berawird
dike ku di hengava muhacirbûna kurdên Sûriyeyê bo nav Tirkyeyê de, anku dema qeyrana
Kobanî ya îlona 2014an, hatine encamdan. Tehlîlên gotarê xwe dispêrine metodên bi
nexşekirina akteran û xebata meydanî li Suruça piranî kurdnişîn. Hevterîb ligel zelzeleyên Wanê
yên 2011an, gotar îşaretê bi hebûna aloziyên qewmî-neteweyî û dubendiyên cor bi cor dike gava
li Tirkiyeyê hewl ji bo qetandina pêdiviyên jiyanî yên kom û xelkên kurd tên dan. Nasnameyên
herêmî yên alternatîv ku encama siyaset û kiryarên “hukûmraniya” kurdî ya di asta şaredariyan
de ne (bi rêya rêvebirina kempan û arîkariyên mirovî) zorê dide wê hiyerarşiya ferazî ya di
navbera rayedarên dewleta tirk û berhelistkarên kurd de.
.
(
.
"
"
)
.
Thomas McGee is an independent researcher based in Duhok, Kurdistan Region-Iraq.
Email: thomas.mcgee@cantab.net
Copyright @ 2016 KURDISH STUDIES © Transnational Press London
52 Mapping action and identity
Introduction
"People don’t want to go to the tents of AFAD (Turkey's Disaster and
Emergency Agency). They lack confidence as they are the tents of the
state. They come to the tents of the municipality. At the moment around 3
thousand people are awaiting tents. AFAD negatively responds to our
demand for new tents. We demanded that the tent cities be built by us.
They only provide some small aid despite our initiatives. For example,
there is a problem of electricity. We have electricity here, but TEDAŞ
(Turkish state Electricity Company) is not undertaking its responsibilities
for the other tent cities." Olcay Kanılbaş, member of Democratic Regions’
Party (Demokratik Bölgeler Partisi, DBP)1 (ANF, 2014).
The above statement by a local Kurdish official speaks clearly to the sense
of mistrust, competition for resources, and conflict in perceived mandates
between key actors engaged in the provision of relief assistance to displaced
Syrian Kurds taking refuge in Turkey. The passage also neatly introduces two
broad actor identities: on the one hand the state and its associated institutions
(referred to here as “they”), and the localised “we” of the Kurdish movement
and its municipal representatives. Building on a contextual understanding of
Turkish-Kurdish relations, this paper draws on actor mapping methodology
to examine the impact of evidently complex social and political dynamics
upon the humanitarian response.
From mid-September 2014, Syria’s Kurdish region of Kobani, also
referred to by its Arabised name, Ayn al-Arab, became the tragic subject of
global headlines. The extremist jihadist group, the Islamic State (IS),2 which
had long surrounded the area, suddenly launched an intensified three-front
offensive towards Kobani town. Heavy weapons IS had plundered from gains
in Iraq left the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (Yekîneyên Parastina Gel,
YPG) unable to effectively resist such advances. Prior to this, Kobani had
received little attention from the international community during the
protracted Syrian conflict, despite a year-long siege and suffering a severe lack
of resources.3
In Sunni-Arab areas of Syria previously taken over by IS much of the
unaffiliated population had remained and submitted (sometimes reluctantly)
to the new Islamic leadership. However, awareness of violations committed
against Kurdish Yezidi civilians during the August 2014 take-over of the
DBP is a successor party of the perhaps better-known Peace and Democracy Party (Barış ve
Demokrasi Partisi, BDP).
2 The group was previously and alternatively known as the Islamic State in Iraq and Sham
(ISIS) or Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL).
3 It should be noted that at the start of the 2011 Revolution in Syria, Kobani was the site of
regular anti-government demonstrations. Protesters made a name for the town in Arab and
international media by being some of the first to take to the streets, beginning their weekly
mobilisations even before Friday prayers, which elsewhere served to mark the start of marches.
1
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McGee 53
Shengal region in Iraq motivated the people of Kobani to flee en masse
(Amnesty International, 2014). This led to the largest single population influx
across the border into Turkey since the start of the Syrian conflict in 2011
(Montgomery, 2014). Indeed over 138,000 people were reported to have
crossed the border during the first few days of displacement alone (UNHCR,
2014a). Although many Kurds had left Syria for the Kurdistan Region of Iraq,
where the refugee population was already reported to be approximately
200,000,4 prior to the Kobani crisis there had been no Kurdish-specific influx
of significant size into Turkey. Rather, the increase in Kurds entering the
country had to that point been gradual and largely proportionate to the
growing numbers of the overall Syrian displaced population.
News coverage of the Kobani crisis mostly focused on the narrative of
Kurdish resistance (Abdo, 2014; Salih, 2014),5 in addition to military
developments (Gee, 2014; James and Letsch, 2014), including the subsequent
campaign of airstrikes against IS by the international (US-led) coalition, and
reinforced support to YPG coming from both the Free Syrian Army (FSA)
battalions and peshmerga fighters sent by the Kurdistan Regional Government
in Iraq (Spencer and Samaan, 2014). From the onset, commentators have
penned advocacy pieces calling for greater international awareness of, and
support to, the Kurds (e.g. Graeber, 2014). With the battle to dispel IS
ongoing,6 far less media attention was given to the humanitarian situation of
the civilian population, which had almost entirely left the Kobani region,
mostly seeking refuge across the border in Turkey. This article aspires to
present a contribution to fill the information gap in existing literature on the
dynamic relations of relief aid providers to this displaced population,
extrapolating on actor engagement in “official”, as well as “alternative”,
delivery and coordination architectures.
While part of the affected community had moved further afield, the
present study will focus on actors providing assistance to the displaced
population based in Suruç (Pirsûs in Kurdish): the area directly bordering
Kobani itself on the Turkish side.7 Elsewhere, those displaced from Kobani
are considered as “new arrivals” within the general Syrian “refugee” caseload
in Turkey and, following such logic, are integrated into established assistance
programmes.8 In contrast, the Kobani population in Suruç was sufficiently
concentrated and visible to constitute its own distinct (sub-) community.
This figure is based on UNHCR registration data, August 2014.
Indeed, #BerxwedanaKobanê (Kobani Resistance) became a popular twitter hashtag to draw
world attention to events taking place in the border-town.
6 At the time of field research, significant advances were being made by Kurdish forces seeking
to “liberate” Kobani from IS control.
7 Excluding those settling in Urfa, Gaziantep or further afield, the number of individuals left in
Suruç was roughly estimated to be 50,000.
8 For further details on the temporary protection regime concerning Syrian refugees, see
Özden, 2013.
4
5
Copyright @ 2016 KURDISH STUDIES © Transnational Press London
54 Mapping action and identity
While appreciating the international legal definition as a person outside
his/her country due to a “well-founded fear of persecution,” this author
recognises the especially problematic connotations carried by the term
“refugee” in the context of displacement for a trans-border stateless nation. In
respect of manifest resistance against such identifications by members of both
displaced and hosting Kurdish communities, I seek, as much as possible, to
avoid reinforcing normative labels that clearly trouble the human subjects in
question. When the term “refugee” is used in this article, it is in order to
underline the particular rights to assistance and protection conferred by its
recognised legal status.9
Case study justification
The anticipated value of the selected case study is two-fold. Firstly,
observing the challenges faced by external actors in navigating the complex
stakeholder relations, it was evident that there remains a general lack of
contextual knowledge about the actor dynamics implied by engagement in this
field. Of the large number of established international non-governmental
organisations (INGOs) who quickly descended on Suruç in order to conduct
initial needs assessments in the wake of the Kobani crisis, disappointingly few
succeeded in implementing a rapid response. Reasons cited by the
organisations’ representatives included limited understanding of the “local
access situation,” little prior contact with, and few available entry points into,
the community, as well as apprehension about “selecting the ‘wrong’ channels
through which to work.”10 Applying a more comprehensive actor mapping
methodology to this case study is pragmatically important for evaluating the
inadequate Kobani response, and the challenges still faced in similar contexts.
Indeed, observations from this study have been requested by, and shared
with, representatives of a number of international humanitarian organisations
active in the region.
As such, while sharing the goal expressed by one group of local
humanitarian practitioners to “inform and contribute to more coordinated
and strategic implementation and assessment processes” with respect to
interventions in Suruç (Bihar, 2014: 2), the present article is also driven by a
second motivation: namely, to reflect more broadly and conceptually on the
implications that actors of “contentious politics” can have on a humanitarian
response (Tilly, 2008), and how their relations with others may determine
questions of humanitarian access. The particular Kurdish-Turkish identity
dynamics in this context further complicate the inherent asymmetrical power
relations existent between humanitarian “agencies” and the beneficiaries they
9 While Turkish law considers Syrians as “guests” rather than refugees, the UN Refugee Agency
(UNHCR) regularly refers to the population of “Syrian refugees in Turkey.”
10 Explanations provided in author’s interviews with INGO representatives present in Suruç
during October 2014.
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McGee 55
are mandated to serve. Little academic work has been produced on the
challenges posed to the coordination of humanitarian action by tensions
between state and non-state challengers. In comparing the approaches of
actors associated with the Turkish state and those responding with a visible
pro-Kurdish identity, this article contributes a compelling case study to
expand knowledge in this very area.
Given the somewhat contemporary nature of the Kobani response, casespecific academic literature remains scarce. While news articles were often
accompanied by images from the camps in Suruç as a result of the relatively
easy and secure access for photo-journalists, the textual content of most
media pieces focused on military developments taking place on the Syrian side
of the border. Those publishing on the relief response are in the most part
humanitarian actors themselves. Among them, we find two largely distinct
political narratives propagated, which tend (if at all) to acknowledge each
other's existence only through criticism and accusation. Firstly, the reports
most forcefully reflecting the “official” position of the Turkish state are by the
Prime Ministry Disaster and Emergency Management Presidency (Afet ve Acil
Durum Yönetimi Başkanlığı, AFAD) and the Turkish Red Crescent (Kızılay). On
the other hand, pro-Kurdish relief narratives are transmitted by the Kurdishled municipalities (see Güneydoğu Anadolu Bölgesi Belediyeler Birliği, GABB, 2014),
as well as the Kurdish Red Crescent (Heyva Sor)11 and other affiliated actors.
Meanwhile, international organisations, including the United Nations Refugee
Agency (UNHCR), have generally been cautious in publicly mentioning these
dynamics, preferring to do most of their advocacy through “quiet” diplomacy
with the parties in question.
This article builds on the currently very few contributions that bring
together the Turkish and Kurdish narratives (e.g. Bihar, 2014; IMPR, 2014). It
is this author's view that a more balanced and faithful description of reality
will more justly serve academic analysis of the situation in Suruç. Independent
study should account for and comment on, rather than reproduce, the
polarisation that governs the logic of aid distribution within this crisis. With
generally little consideration given to mechanisms of relief assistance in the
Kobani response, even in daily media, this paper draws on literature
highlighting actor dynamics after the 2011 Van earthquakes for a comparative
perspective.
Methodological notes
This study draws broadly on methodologies of actor mapping: that is the
process of identifying and profiling individuals and/or groups whose actions
This includes both Heyva Sor a Kurdistanê founded from Germany in 1993 as well as Heyva Sor
a Kurd of 2012, which works especially in Rojava/Syria.
11
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56 Mapping action and identity
are considered to be of significant impact on a given subject.12 While these
approaches are employed in fields as diverse as business and project
management, conflict analysis and public policy, the UN Office of the High
Commissioner for Human Rights usefully describes such mapping as a
“common tool for understanding key actors, identifying and mapping out
power relationships and channels of influence” (OHCHR, 2011: 24). Actor
mapping and analysis has useful pragmatic applications in informing and
determining “context-sensitive” engagement strategies. In situations of
conflict and/or significant hardship, this function is even more crucial given
the accepted humanitarian imperative to “do no harm” (Anderson, 1999).
Mapping exercises are often used normatively to establish clear parameters
that individual actors must respect for the sake of effective systems
coordination. While appreciating the need, for example, to “ensure clear
division of responsibility of refugee protection actors and the importance of
complementarity” (Reach Out, 2005), this article seeks not to limit its analysis
to formally mandated roles and officially prescribed inter-institutional
relations. Rather, I use material collected through ethnographic field enquiry
in order to more accurately describe the complex, and often untidy, reality.
Research for this study was conducted with the assumption that daily actor
engagements significantly deviate from the ideal-type coordination systems
that exist on paper. Moreover, it is noted that much literature on humanitarian
coordination mechanisms is produced by actors operating within, or even
setting up, such systems, and consequently the bias promoting their
predominance is unsurprising. As such, effort is made to consider what are
often referred to as non-traditional actors (including pro-Kurdish ones), who
due to their extra- (or even counter-) systemic nature are frequently left out of
the schema drawn by authoritative commentators in the aid industry.13
In addition to a literature search on the specific case, as well as KurdishTurkish relations and regional humanitarian action more generally, regular
field visits were made to Suruç during the months of September-December
2014. The first visit took place on 21st September as the town was suddenly
forced to deal with the mass arrival of people fleeing Kobani. Initial
observations indicated a number of actors responding to the crisis, visible in
Suruç, for example, through the distribution of cooked meals in the town
square. Based on these details, a preliminary inventory of actors was
12 While the terms “stakeholder” and “actor” are often used somewhat synonymously, the latter
is conscientiously employed in this article to refer to those who not only have an interest (i.e.
stake) in decision-making, but indeed are also positioned to influence outcomes.
13 The expression “non-traditional actors” is frequently used by humanitarian professionals to
refer to those operating outside, and independently of, the most prestigious global coordination
bodies: the somewhat exclusive Development Assistance Committee (DAC) of the
Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) and/or the UN-convened
Inter-Agency Standing Committee (IASC). According to this dominant usage of the term, many
non-western and local actors are in practice thus labelled as “non-traditional.”
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McGee 57
developed. Contact was made and research meetings set up in order to discuss
the situation of assistance provision through semi-structured interviews.
While all those encountered were open to discussion and dialogue, it should
be noted that conversations with Turkish officials were comparatively limited
given the author's ability to communicate in Kurdish and Arabic, but not
Turkish. Most of the international NGOs encountered requested nondisclosure of their organisation’s identity due to political sensitivities. They
have been anonymised accordingly.
During the meetings, respondents were questioned about their activities,
interactions with others, and views about the overall crisis response. Finally,
they were asked to recommend other actors and/or respondents as a form of
“snowballing” (Wasserman & Faust, 1994). Following initial engagement,
multiple return visits were made to the representatives of relief groups, during
which further discussions were held, and aid distributions, as well as
interactions with other actors, were observed.
The context of humanitarian action in Turkey
Recognising that the Kobani crisis came about as a direct result of the
ongoing Syrian war, which has led to considerable changes in Turkey’s
humanitarian policy, the following section presents an overview of the
national emergency response system, with particular focus on post-2011
developments. The historic impact of Kurdish-Turkish relations on instances
of displacement and humanitarian crisis is also briefly traced, as it is
considered relevant to understanding the Suruç/Kobani case study.
In parallel with its growth as a regional and world power, the last decade
has seen Turkey develop as a humanitarian actor both at home and overseas.
Transforming itself from being principally a recipient of external aid, Turkey
has in recent years emerged as a significant international donor, indeed it was
the fourth largest globally in 2012 (Çevik, 2014),14 and has built a reputation as
a “humanitarian state” (Keyman and Sazak, 2014). Propelled by the ambitious
foreign policy approach of key ideologue and statesman Ahmet Davutoğlu,
the ruling Justice and Development Party (Adalet ve Kalkınma Partisi, AKP)15
government has used aid assistance as an entry point to consolidate Turkey’s
“soft power” influence over strategic geographies under the banner of
“humanitarian diplomacy” (Tank, 2015).
With aid transactions and national interests largely coinciding,
commentators note that Turkey’s various interventions have historically been
underpinned by a (sometimes understated) logic of ethnic and/or religious
solidarity, and focus primarily on the Turkic and Islamic world (Binder, 2014).
The post-Cold War emphasis of the Turkish Cooperation and Coordination
Based on 2013 Global Humanitarian Assistance Report results.
AKP is a socially conservative political entity founded in 2001 from a number of existing
reformist and Islamic groups.
14
15
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58 Mapping action and identity
Agency’s (Türk İşbirliği ve Koordinasyon Ajansı Başkanlığı, TİKA) overseas
development aid on the new Turkic states of Central Asia and the Caucasus
has latterly expanded to reflect the country’s increasingly multi-regional
foreign policy strategy.16 Following humanitarian and peace-keeping
engagement in the Balkans from the mid-90s, the period of AKP rule since
2002 has seen Turkey re-orientate its policy to embrace both geographies of
Africa and the Middle East. In the former, high profile exposure for Turkey’s
“on the ground” approach was gained with the unprecedented visit of then
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan to Mogadishu, Somalia, in August 2011
(Ali, 2011).17 The bilateral nature of Turkish aid engagement was also
highlighted in the context of the Arab Spring revolutions, which presented a
unique opportunity to build relationships with emergent powers across the
region (Altunışık, 2014: 340-2).
In this context, Turkey showed early and outright support for the popular
uprisings of 2011 that preceded the humanitarian crisis in Syria. Moreover, it
took a sympathetic position towards political and armed bodies of the
opposition, actively hosting the Syrian National Council in exile. An initial
policy characterised by “hospitality” to those forced to flee regime repression
was enacted to include an “open door” border system and provision of
“temporary protection” to Syrians as “guests” (misafir) since October 2011
(Kirişçi, 2014).18 Despite the Turkish humanitarian system mobilising a high
capacity response,19 it became clear that the measures implemented were
predicated upon the flawed assumption that the conflict would swiftly
conclude, thereby facilitating mass repatriation to Syria (İçduygu, 2015).
Turkey now hosts the largest community of Syrians displaced by the
conflict, while its border simultaneously provides vital access routes for aid to
many of those internally displaced in northern Syria.20 As a result, domestic
humanitarianism has been forced to evolve from its previous emphasis on
preparedness against occasional natural disasters to addressing large-scale,
sustained refugee support and cross-border assistance programs.
TİKA was founded in 1992 to coordinate project engagement in the newly independent
Turkic/Muslim republics of Central Asia.
17 In contrast, western representatives and aid workers tended to work on Somalia remotely
from a base in more secure, neighbouring Kenya.
18 At the time of field research, roll-out of the newly established General Directorate of
Migration Management (GDMM) under the Ministry of Interior had not been fully
implemented, though it was anticipated that the institution focus on regulating the “temporary
protection” regime and harmonising the status of various groups of non-Turkish nationals
within the country.
19 The comparatively high quality of Syrian refugee camps in Turkey has been widely
recognised, with the New York Times even praising Turkey for the “Perfect Refugee Camp”
(McClelland, 2014).
20 By August 2014, UNHCR estimated that 815,000 Syrians had already sought refuge in
Turkey.
16
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McGee 59
Humanitarian actor system
While much of the literature on the Syrian refugee crisis in Turkey has
been policy-minded, for example, advocating for migration law reforms
(Kirişçi, 2014; İçduygu, 2015), Anglophone academia, as Binder points out,
“know[s] little about Turkey’s rapidly increasing humanitarian engagement”
(2014). Moreover, far more attention has been paid to TİKA’s role in overseas
development projects (Ali, 2011; Özkan and Demirtepe, 2012) than to the
system of actors involved in implementing humanitarian action within the
country. Historically, the devastating consequences of the 1999 Marmara
earthquake represent a revelation in Turkish disaster management,
highlighting the state’s dominant top-down attitude and “lack of local
involvement and empowerment” of civil society actors (Özerdem and Jacoby,
2006: 59).
Peculiar to Turkey’s highly centralised humanitarian model is the active
role played by state ministries and bureaucracies in the daily administration of
assistance programs. While the AKP-dominated Ministry of Foreign Affairs
(MFA) leads on political aspects of aid and high-level coordination, it entrusts
AFAD to be the face of crisis response in Turkey. Founded in 2009 under the
auspices of the Prime Minister’s office as a result of a decade-long process to
reform emergency response institutions in Turkey, AFAD is now responsible
for registration of Syrians as well as establishing and directly administering
camps to accommodate them. Treating the refugee response as a
predominantly sovereign issue, Turkey’s decisive leadership and insistent nonreliance on the international community has empowered AFAD to perform
functions elsewhere associated with the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR). The
latter in Turkey has chiefly played a consultative and advisory role since the
start of the Syria crisis.
Besides the AKP-led government, Binder highlights two other key forces
within the Turkish humanitarian assistance model: i) the conservative business
community and ii) the movement of wealthy Islamic philanthropist Fethullah
Gülen (ibid). All three of these influential entities generally reference Sunni
Muslim ideas of charitable action, and lend their support to respectively
associated faith-based national NGOs.
As the diagram below illustrates, the Foundation for Human Rights and
Freedoms and Humanitarian Relief (known commonly as İHH)21 is
considered strongly affiliated to the ruling AKP and receives the ideological, if
not also organisational, backing of head of state Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.22
Indeed, privileged access, including to refugee camps in Turkey (Özden, 2013:
8-9), has allowed the organisation to become the principal provider of relief
aid to Syrians on both sides of the border. However, İHH’s explicitly MuslimİHH is an acronym from the Turkish name: İnsan Hak ve Hürriyetleri ve İnsani Yardım Vakfı.
This relationship is confirmed by İHH’s own website, which hosts an article entitled
“Support from Erdogan for IHH”: www.ihh.org.tr/ru/main/news/0/support-from-erdoganfor-ihh/2439 (last accessed 7 May 2016).
21
22
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60 Mapping action and identity
focused origins and scope,23 with a somewhat militant identity, render it a
controversial entity in the eyes of mainstream actors in the international
humanitarian community. Questionable trans-national connections to
internationally prohibited and extremist groups (including Hamas and alQaeda) have added to this notoriety, further complicating the perceived
uncritical proximity between the organisation and key state politicians (WSJ,
2010).
Figure 1. Pictorial Representation of Turkish Humanitarian Architecture.
Meanwhile, two other Turkish NGOs Deniz Feneri and Kimse Yok Mu? have
been perceived as humanitarian implementers for the Gülen Movement. The
usually high degree of support and facilitation by Turkish officials for national
faith-based charities noted by several academics (Keyman and Sazak, 2014:
10; Tank, 2015) was complicated somewhat by intensification of the public
dispute between former allies Gülen and Erdoğan in 2013. Most remarkably,
tensions culminated in the exceptional raid on İHH's Kilis office on 14
January 2014 by the Jandarma (military police), with Gülen’s movement
perceived to have exerted pervasive influence on the latter (Vela, 2014). In
light of the tensions between actors of conservative Islam in Turkey, Deniz
Founded to provide aid to Bosnia’s Muslims in the mid-90s, the organisation continues to
treat causes and conflicts affecting Muslims as the core of its work. In Syria, its partner
organisations are mostly affiliated with the Muslim Brotherhood.
23
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McGee 61
Feneri is acknowledged to have re-positioned itself more equidistantly between
Gülen and the AKP (reflected in Figure 1).24
Finally, the Turkish Red Crescent (TRC)25 has a uniquely prestigious status
as the oldest and largest charitable association in Turkey preceding the
founding of the Turkish Republic (Benthall and Bellion-Jourdan, 2003: 45-68).
While officially non-governmental, and moreover enjoying formal recognition
as a member of the international movement of Red Cross/Red Crescent
societies, the organisation is state-mandated and furthermore, according to
one study, is “perceived by practically everyone as an extension of the state”
(Paker, 2007: 654). While the Turkish government established AFAD as the
lead agency of the Syrian Crisis Humanitarian Assistance Operation in August
2012, TRC, owing to its experience in customs clearance, was officially
mandated with the responsibility for “zero point delivery” and transfer of
cross-border assistance into Syria (Binder, 2014; Kirişci, 2013).
The Turkish humanitarian context and the Kurds
In addition to the long-time competition between central and local actors,
humanitarianism in Turkey is significantly complicated by the government’s
anxiety about political challenge posed by Kurds as both the country’s largest
ethnic minority and a group of distinctive national identity (Tank, 2015: 3).
Since the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne endowed the Turkish nation with a formal
state structure while depriving Kurds of the same, academics have mostly
reproduced the distinction between Turkish authorities and challenger Kurds
as a non-state group (Heper, 2007; White, 2000; Gunter, 1997). Turkish
history tends to be ordered according to structuralist logic, examining the
consequences of regime change (through both military coup and ballot box),
while Kurdish developments are more frequently accounted for by drawing
on social movement theory (Watts, 2010; Romano, 2006). Though
this binary system of Turkish oppression and Kurdish resistance is clearly a
simplification of the reality at the individual level, experiences of exclusion
and manipulation by the central government have become central to Kurdish
collective subjectivity.
Frequent references to the 1925 Sheikh Said rebellion and the repressive
response by the Turkish government in discourses on Kurdish-ness (e.g.
Olson, 1989) exemplify the construction of national identity around a broad
“dialectic of denial and resistance” (Vali, 1998: 85). The history of multifaceted social engineering, including co-option, assimilation, non-recognition,
neglect, forced displacement, combat etc. undertaken by Turkey’s successive
governments against the country’s native Kurds (Üngör, 2008), presents
significant challenges to the possibility of needs-based and neutral
This assertion is informed by the anecdotal observations shared by several key respondents
during October 2014.
25 Also known as (Türk) Kızılay, the Turkish word for “Crescent.”
24
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62 Mapping action and identity
humanitarian action. Moreover, Kurdish identity itself retains somewhat
controversial associations in Turkey due to the highly political history of
conflict between Kurdish rebels and the state.
While Kurdish society has been significantly influenced by (conservative)
Islamic and tribal traditions, contemporary usage of the term “Kurdish
Movement” typically refers to a specific leftist, secular mass mobilisation that
emerged in the early 1970s (Romano, 2006: 99-182). Founded by a leader
perceived to have “c[o]me out of nowhere” (Marcus, 2007: 30), the Kurdistan
Workers’ Party (Partiya Karkerên Kurdistan, PKK) increasingly became the
dominant voice representing Kurdish ethno-political demands. The outbreak
of armed hostilities between guerrilla insurgents on behalf of an emboldened
Kurdish national movement and the Turkish state military around 1984
opened a chapter of further polarisation, framed by the latter within an antiterrorism and “security regime” narrative (Dorronsoro, 2008).
In this context, population movements and humanitarian crises involving
Kurds are particularly contentious, as demonstrated by the displacement of
Iraqi Kurds to Turkey after both intensification of Saddam Hussain's Anfal
campaign of ethnic cleansing in 1988, and the 1991 Gulf war (Ihlamur-Öner,
2013). Fearful of a potential security threat on its territory, Turkey sought in
1988 to contain the risk that there might be PKK sympathisers among the
more than 60,000 refugees by keeping them in 12 tightly controlled camps.
During the 1991 influx, Turkey blocked the entry of fleeing Kurds, thus
forcing the creation of a safe haven in Iraq, which would facilitate the crossborder return of Iraqi Kurds who had come to Turkey (Özdamar and Taydaş,
2013). These experiences left traces of deep paranoia about Kurdish ethnonational identity within the institutions of Turkey's asylum system, the policies
of which already historically favoured those of “Turkish descent and culture”
(Kirişçi, 2014: 7; İçduygu, 2015).
The general dynamics changed somewhat after the arrest of the PKK
leader Abdullah Öcalan in 1999, with the movement entering an official peace
process with the state, renouncing separatist armed struggle and shifting its
ideology
to
embrace
“radical
democracy”
for
all
in
Turkey (Akkaya and Jongerden, 2012). Nonetheless, pro-Kurdish actors have
in the main part, and sometimes wilfully so, retained their “challenger” status.
Moreover, the legal Kurdish parties, starting with the People's Labour Party
(Halkın Emek Partisi, HEP) in 1990, that seek representation through
contesting elections are often perceived as PKK surrogates (Watts, 2010: 13).
However, through accessing municipal resources, pro-Kurdish representatives
have used their hybrid “activist-politician” identity to acquire new status as
official authorities and transcend traditional characterisation of Kurds as
largely reactive to hegemonic actions of the central state. This article argues
that despite often still espousing a somewhat extra-systemic identity, the
municipalities have demonstrated their capacity for pro-active mobilisation of
www.KurdishStudies.net
McGee 63
their own responses to the (humanitarian) needs of Kurdish areas during the
crisis in Syria.
While the Turkish government has elsewhere facilitated cross-border relief
shipments (particularly at the Bab Al-Salame and Bab Al-Hawa crossing
points into opposition-controlled Aleppo), access to Kurdish populated areas
of Syria has been restricted, with only occasional transfers of humanitarian aid
being permitted. Despite the UN Inter-Agency convoy of 79 aid trucks via the
Nusaybin-Qamishli border to al-Hassaka Governorate in March 2014, three
months later this crossing point was excluded from the 2165 Security Council
Resolution, which authorised the use of four other border gates for United
Nations cross-border deliveries into Syria. In addition to the Kurdish
municipalities managing to arrange for some aid to be delivered, Turkish
NGO İHH has, as a result of its close connections to the AKP government
and consequent ability to gain the necessary approvals, been the dominant
actor sending aid to Kurdish regions of Syria.26
Preliminary research interviews with Kurds from Syria highlighted the
criticisms and controversy manifest in popular perceptions of humanitarian
assistance delivered cross-border from Turkey. Besides accusations that relief
shipments present a screen for support to (Islamist) armed groups in Syria
(Humeyr and Tattersall, 2015), it was generally considered that decisions
governing humanitarian access were politically motivated. A case in point was
the Turkish government's attempt to establish a border wall at Nusaybin,
separating the Kurdish communities on the Syrian and Turkish side of the
border in November 2013 (Letsch, 2013).
Humanitarian Action in Suruç
While, as mentioned above, INGOs quickly took an interest in the needs
around Suruç, they were met with the task of situating themselves within the
field of national and local actors already engaged in aid provision. Broadly
speaking, most of these operational entities can be classified through actor
mapping according to their proximity to, and identification with, the two main
“forces at work” (OHCHR, idem: 25): specifically the Turkish state response
and that of the Kurdish national movement. In many cases, similar activities
are conducted by actors on both sides of this political divide (see the example
of camp administration dealt with in detail later in this article). Table 1
presents in the most basic terms the key actors associated with each affiliation.
The state-supported response is administered by the sub-governor’s
(kaymakam) office as representative of the central government at local level.
While the sub-governor is appointed and not a local of Suruç, his office
employs a number of Kurdish civil servants from within the community. The
Indeed, İHH had sent assistance into Kobani only a few days before IS began advancing on
the area: Retrieved from www.ihh.org.tr/tr/main/region/suriye/8/ihhdan-rojava-ve-kobaniye27-yardim-tiri/2489 (last accessed on 12 April 2015).
26
Copyright @ 2016 KURDISH STUDIES © Transnational Press London
64 Mapping action and identity
kaymakam has hosted coordination meetings, and serves as the “officially”
correct interlocutor for UN and INGO agencies, through endorsement by the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA). Executing state-directed action on the
ground are foremost AFAD, and the governmental directorates (e.g.
Department of Health), with the support of TRC/Kızılay.
Table 1. Basic terms and key actors affiliated
Turkish Actors
Kurdish Actors
International Actors
Sub-governor of Suruç
(kaymakam); Disaster
and Emergency
Management
Presidency (AFAD)
Suruç Municipality
(belediye) and other
Kurdish-run
municipalities
(Diyarbekir/Van etc.)
United Nations (UN)
Agencies:
principally UNHCR
Turkish Red Crescent
(TRC/Türk Kızılay)
Kurdish Red Crescent
(Heyva Sor a Kurdistanê)
International Red
Cross/Red Crescent
Movement
Turkish NGOs (e.g.
İHH)
Kurdish (& diaspora)
NGOs (e.g. Kurdish
Doctors Union)
International NonGovernmental
Organisations (INGOs)
Besides this highly centralised, state-led response, which represents the
established system for refugee administration in Turkey, is another network of
actors grouped around the local Kurdish authorities represented at the
municipal office (belediye) level. Pro-Kurdish organisations operating in
coordination with, and under the wide umbrella of the municipalities, include
Heyva Sor (Kurdish Red Crescent) and diaspora-based branches of the
Kurdish Doctors Union. Despite the municipalities being legally elected
bodies, officially integrated into the system of state governance, their Kurdish
representatives often maintain their popular legitimacy by stressing extrasystemic identities and counter-hegemonic discourse. While receiving the
standard funding allocation from the Bank of Provinces, Suruç Mayor Orhan
Şansal confirms not having received any state support specifically to respond
towards the Kobani displacement crisis.27 Nonetheless, and with little
professional humanitarian experience (by international standards), they were,
building on local community knowledge, able to mobilise an early response.
Public buildings were opened up to house the displaced, and the team of
volunteer loaders and sorters operating from the municipal garaj (depot) was
27
Author's interview via social media on 9 January 2015.
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McGee 65
quickly expanded. According to their own capacity assessment, they “meet to
a great extent the needs of the people, despite limited facilities” (ANF, 2014).
In spite of the physical proximity of the governor's office (kaymakam) and
that of the municipality (belediye), both around Suruç’s central square,
coordination and transparent information sharing appear limited, with the
relationship instead characterised by competition between parallel service
provision mechanisms. Two largely distinct bodies have evolved with the
purpose of coordinating humanitarian action in Suruç. First, the Crisis Desk
was established by the sub-governor with its counterparts AFAD and Kızılay.
This Desk holds authority to determine which external actors are permitted to
engage and provide assistance in the area. Effectively excluded from
coordination opportunities associated with the above structure, the
municipality established the Kobani Crisis Coordination, which is essentially a
second crisis desk, through a central coordination committee with
participation from various entities belonging to the Kurdish movement
(GABB, 2014: 3). Likewise, the Rojava Assistance and Solidarity Association
(Rojava Yardımlaşma ve Dayanışma Derneği) was founded in an attempt to
professionalise the organisation of in-kind assistance collected and sent by
organisations, other municipalities (Van, Diyarbakir etc.) and the public, as
well as to accommodate monetary donations.
Van earthquake comparison
With many similar actors and conceptual issues at play, the two
earthquakes that struck the Van region of Turkey in 2011 present a precedent
and useful parallel for understanding the dynamics of the 2014 Suruç
response. Like the Kobani crisis, the Van earthquakes demonstrated the
potential controversy surrounding relief responses in majority-Kurdish areas
in Turkey, with these tensions easily amplified by media reactions (AFP,
2011).
Both emergencies generated much introspection as well as accusations of
mismanagement on the part of the national authorities. However, a clear
difference is that while in Van the government’s actions were described as
“turning a natural disaster into a political one” (Sharifi, 2011; also Schäfers,
2016), the people of Kobani suffered a purely human-induced tragedy; one
that was both political and military from the outset. For the former, a number
of studies and publications responded to the call for evaluation by addressing
the possible infrastructural weaknesses and inadequate technical preparations
for a region prone to seismic activity.28 Such a scientific reading was not
The majority of Anglophone academic publications on the Van earthquakes are written by
engineers and scientists (especially those with architectural and seismological specialisations),
and deal exclusively with technical deficiencies. Specific criticisms focus on negligent
engineering practices, including buildings built too high, illegal construction, use of poor quality
concrete (Mimarlar Odası, 2012; Taskin and Sezen, 2012), and lack of “disaster sensitive
planning” (Turan, 2012).
28
Copyright @ 2016 KURDISH STUDIES © Transnational Press London
66 Mapping action and identity
tenable for the Kobani crisis. With Turkish foreign policy decisively favouring
certain parties to the war in Syria (Vela, 2013), not to mention its fierce
opposition to the emergence of a de facto Kurdish administration across the
border, the forced displacement of civilians from Kobani is at origin an issue
marked by pronounced political sensitivity.
Nonetheless, in both cases, there are attempts to provide an explicitly
apolitical (and moreover actively de-politicised) presentation of the field
situation. In several works addressing questions of post-disaster coordination
in Van, a narrative consciously cleansed of Kurdish agency is propagated, with
no mention of the affected population’s Kurdish ethnic identity. For example,
Celik and Corbacioglu's relatively in-depth network analysis of earthquake
responders fails to reference efforts of the Kurdish-run municipalities and
NGOs (2013). In Suruç, it was observed that a similar discourse was being
reproduced at the Ad Hoc Inter-Agency meetings facilitated by UNHCR. There,
the municipality-run camps of Suruç, with their symbolically powerful
Kurdish names (discussed later in this article), were referred to only by
assigned numbers. Kobani camp, for instance, had effectively been renamed
as “Camp 1.” As such, in both cases, the ostensible commitment to
humanitarian and/or scientific objectivity embedded within the “officially”
correct discourse of relief action disguises a powerful hegemonic state logic.
Despite its cross-border dimension, and the Kobani crisis primarily
affecting a non-citizen population (i.e. foreigners to the Turkish Republic),
relief action in both Suruç and Van is framed through a narrative of statemanaged disasters (De Maupeou, 2013). A statement by the then Prime
Minister Erdoğan after the Van earthquake that “[t]he state is there with all its
institutions” could equally apply to the Kobani response (Avci, 2011), with
the Health Department, AFAD, TRC/Kızılay all stationed on the border
together with the police and national security forces. The central role of the
state is significantly reinforced by traditional humanitarian actors in what
Ozkapici refers to as the official coordination system (2012). For example, a
report by IFRC states that the:
“[Van] response operation has been led by the government, notably by
the Prime Ministry Disaster and Emergency Management Presidency
(AFAD) assisted by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and other agencies [...]
The Turkish Red Crescent participates as a permanent member in the
boards, which are established by AFAD. These boards are responsible for
determining rules and principles of relief operations to be conducted
during disasters. At provincial level, the responsible body is the concerned
Provincial Directorate of Disaster and Emergency that is working in close
cooperation with the Turkish Red Crescent” (2012).
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McGee 67
A few rare reports on the earthquake crisis hint towards a more complex
actor reality. While providing little analysis of inter-actor relations, Zaré and
Nazmazar present a more objective timeline of events and description of
other (including Kurdish) responders involved in the relief process (2013).
More thorough examination of civil society-public sector cooperation in the
crisis (TUSEV, 2013) highlights the significant, yet somewhat ambiguous, role
of the local municipalities as “activists in office” (Watts, 2010). Their
association with the pro-Kurdish movement results in a spill-over of
politicised identity into the humanitarian field. Referring to long-standing
unresolved grievances and disputes labelled by the Turkish state as the
“Kurdish problem,” it is noted that “provision of relief aid after the 2011 Van
earthquake [...] clearly brought some of these social problems to the surface”
(Özerdem and Özerdem, 2013: 5). Interviews from the field in Suruç suggest
that this phenomenon remains highly prevalent in 2014.
Mistrust between local Kurdish and central Turkish authorities in Van
resulted in coordination and organisational obstacles to effective aid
management. Lack of communication and consultation on the part of the
government and its provincial sub-offices with the pro-Kurdish Peace and
Democracy Party (Barış ve Demokrasi Partisi, BDP)-run municipalities led to
significant tension and accusations that the insufficient state response was
politically motivated (Akgönül, 2011). This was clearly manifest in the
municipalities' exclusion from the AFAD-led coordination committees
despite the former's evident pre-crisis local knowledge (TUSEV, 2013: 5).
Culpability for limited cooperation is contested since “the [BDP] mayor
complained that he was not invited to coordination meetings, while the
governor [appointed by Ankara], claiming that an invitation is not needed,
said that it was the mayor who was not present in the meetings” (Onur, 2011).
Political tensions increased with Kurdish voices criticising the government
for initially refusing offers of international assistance, while the government
provocatively accused “those [Kurdish actors] who are able to organise people
to throw stones at police and soldiers, vandalizing the streets, throwing
Molotov cocktails [... of] fail[ing] to reach out to an area that is right next to
them” (Avci, 2011). The historic mistrust that the Kurdish movement has for
the government of Turkey was reiterated in Suruç with pro-Kurdish
commentators there implicating Turkey’s foreign policy towards Syria and
well-known displeasure for the Kurdish administration project in Kobani as
factors facilitating IS’s successful displacement strategy.29 Post-crisis criticism
was equally strong, with a report by Kurdish municipalities stating that the
“central government hasn’t shown the required sensitivity on this issue, and
established only 3 camps for 8,960 people from Shingal and Kobani. And, the
According to an interview conducted by a coalition of Human Rights Organisations (2014)
“the opinion that Turkey knew about the attacks on Kobani beforehand was prevalent.”
29
Copyright @ 2016 KURDISH STUDIES © Transnational Press London
68 Mapping action and identity
government hasn’t developed any policies for the remaining war victims”
(GABB, 2014: 3).
While the immediate needs for temporary shelter and basic relief items
were common to both Van and Suruç, the Kobani crisis took place against the
backdrop of an emerging Kurdish self-administration in Syria and a more
empowered Kurdish municipal representation in Turkey. Nonetheless, it is
considered that the Van case provides a valuable parallel for understanding
the Suruç response. It presents a precedent landscape, in which “it would not
be an exaggeration to claim that political interests and calculations accompany
every initiative from the collection of aid to its distribution” (Akgönül, 2011).
Nowhere, perhaps, is this phenomenon more clearly manifest than with
assistance provision in the camps of Suruç.
A comparison between AFAD and municipality-run camps
Shortly after the initial cross-border movement of civilians fleeing Kobani,
two overlapping yet identifiably differentiated caseloads began to emerge in
Suruç. As those unable to accommodate themselves with friends or relatives
upon arrival turned to communal settings for shelter options, families often
found themselves, sometimes unconsciously, selecting spaces associated with
either pro-Kurdish or state-supported entities. As an immediate response to
the sudden influx, the Suruç municipality allowed people to settle in public
buildings including the wedding hall, cultural centre and several mosques.
Meanwhile, state-run transit camps in rural Suruç were used to take in newly
arrived families. It was reported that some 9,000 individuals moved to preexisting Yibo and Onbir Nisan AFAD centres near Suruç.30 While in
December 2014 AFAD had begun preparations to open a much larger and
better designed state-funded facility further out at the Ali Gör junction to
house some of the more than 40,000 Kobani population self-accommodated
or hosted in Suruç region, the municipality had – for its part – established
three “tent camps” on the northern exit road from Suruç towards Urfa with a
total capacity for more than 10,000 individuals.31
While the AFAD-administered camps are mostly known after the area in
which they are located, for the municipality naming camps serves as a
powerful symbolic practice. Not only do the camp “signifiers” resonate
strongly with Kurdish nationalist terminology, but they also enact the
associated territorial claims discursively. Given that “Rojava” refers to
Western (i.e. Syrian) Kurdistan, for example, its appropriation as a name for a
camp on the northern side of the international border is deeply troubling for
Turkey and its conception of state sovereignty based on inviolable territorial
integrity. Challenging the organisational terrain of the state, the name also
Statistics provided by UNHCR in December 2014.
Idem; The number of municipality-administered camps in Suruç had increased in early 2015,
but by June of the same year they had, besides hosting a few remaining families, essentially
ceased to operate as camps.
30
31
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McGee 69
invokes a determination to return to the homeland, as such confirming the
camp as a symbolic space of dual resistance: both against the Islamic State
aggressors and Turkish state policy, which has historically been reluctant to
acknowledge Kurdish existence in the country.
Figure 2. Signage to “Rojava” camp administered by the Suruç municipality
Such a satellite settlement of Rojava within the borders of the Turkish
Republic emphasises the broader geographical nature of Kurdish identity, and
substantiates subversive trans-border solidarity. Moreover, the administrative
structure of elected community representation within the camp strongly
resembles the “commune” governance system evolving in Kurdish-controlled
territory of Rojava/Syria. Establishing the respective identities of the Kobani
and Shehid [Martyr] Arin Mirkan camps (the latter named after a female
fighter who carried out a suicide action against IS while defending the city)
can be understood as willed acts of commemoration, symbolically
compensating for losses incurred across the border, and continuing the transborder dialectic of repression and resistance.32 Indeed, these “out-of-place”
names can present a point of embarrassment for Turkish officials when
brought up in coordination meetings and, as mentioned earlier, were
eventually replaced with numerical identification.
Not only symbolic, camps are of course also “lived” spaces for their
communities. In the municipality-established camps, people were heard
speaking openly about support for Kurdish People’s Protection Units
(Yekîneyên Parastina Gel, YPG) forces, with children seeming spontaneously to
See parallel practices by the Palestinian diaspora observed by Peteet, 2005; Schulz and
Hammer, 2003.
32
Copyright @ 2016 KURDISH STUDIES © Transnational Press London
70 Mapping action and identity
sing pro-Democratic Union Party (Partiya Yekîtiya Demokrat, PYD) songs
whenever international visitors were present.33 In contrast, such behaviour is
remarkably absent in the camps of AFAD. Based on interviews with those
living in both municipality and AFAD-run camps, the identity of the camp
administration seems to condition the kind of political expressions people are
comfortable to make, rather than necessarily forming opinion; nor does it
appear that political ideology strongly determines who settles in which camp.
After establishing relations with people residing in the municipality camps, a
number explained that they are simultaneously registered with AFAD and
regularly attend AFAD distributions outside the camp. “My political views
and my family's needs are separate issues,” says one such resident. “I have
always supported the Kurdish movement, and continue to do so, but we all
know AFAD's resources are greater.”
Confirming Liisa Malkki’s analysis of the camp as a “technology of care
and control” (1992: 34), a space of humanitarian aid and containment, many
in Suruç were left with somewhat ambivalent sentiments. While his
description of the municipality-run camps as “places of liberation and
resistance” underlines the opportunity for emancipatory demarcation of
collective identity, one research participant hosted by relatives in the town
nevertheless stressed: “I will do everything in my power to avoid the camps,
for to live in a camp here is to enter the big battle between the state and the
[Kurdish] party.” It is clear that the camps of each actor serve to support its
respective political narrative: the state emphasises its role as primary service
provider, while the Kurdish movement asserts itself as the legitimate
custodian for its ethnic kin.
Impact on the humanitarian space
While in many conflict-induced crises, humanitarian space and access are
limited by the presence of armed groups, in Suruç negotiation of the relations
between aid actors of various identities is as much of an obstacle as are legal
and bureaucratic restrictions. Competition between parallel assistance systems,
and significantly two sets of governance structures, results in a polarisation of
the humanitarian response. Though difficult to ascertain the extent of overlap
in services and particular “beneficiaries” served,34 there is a clear duplication
of assumed institutional missions between the Turkish state authorities
(AFAD, ministries etc.) and local Kurdish municipal representation, as well as,
for example, the respective Turkish and Kurdish Red Crescent
organisations.35 The distinction between Turkish (state) actors and those
Observation based on a number of visits by the author to the camps during the research
period.
34 The possibility of duplication, particularly in non-camp settings, was highlighted as a cause
for concern by several INGOs during coordination meetings.
35 According to the Fundamental Principles of the International Red Cross and Red Crescent
Movement, “there can be only one Red Cross or Red Crescent society in any one country.”
33
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McGee 71
related to the Kurdish movement is, therefore, less structural or typological
(i.e. not public sector verses civil society) than it is based on political identity
and ideology.
While AKP’s ruling strategy has included empowerment of the
municipalities as decision-makers in local matters, and indeed the party’s first
victories in Turkey were experienced at the municipal level (Buğra and
Savaşkan, 2014: 68), Turkey’s humanitarian response system continues to
devalue the role of local-level actors, including non-government-affiliated
NGOs. The engagement of the Kurdish-run municipalities in the organisation
of emergency humanitarian assistance and their partnership with a number of
mainstream international NGOs in Suruç exceeds their officially prescribed
institutional mandate, and destabilises the highly centralised system of crisis
management in Turkey. Moreover, entering this field as an alternative set of
authorities allows pro-Kurdish entities to transcend the reductive
characterisation of Kurds as reactive non-state challengers, and instead to
transform their challenge by pro-actively performing parallel state-like duties
on a localised level. Recognised as interlocutors well acquainted with the
affected population by representatives of the international humanitarian
community provided a level of legitimacy to the Kurdish-run municipalities,
even if this did not always lead to direct funding or support for pro-Kurdish
actors.
At the same time, this polarisation of actors presents a direct threat to the
maintenance of humanitarian neutrality and can present obstacles to access
for humanitarian engagement. This has led to some of those sympathetically
learning about the Kobani people's suffering from afar encountering
difficulties in finding an “appropriate” way to send support.36 Donors (large
and small) as well as INGOs have hesitated before making a commitment
within this political minefield, and many implementers have found themselves
labelled with unwanted partisan identities. The polarisation and perceived
obligation to choose one side over the other became a reality for a number of
actors. Responding to the municipality's attempts to enter the coordination
field, and recognising that they are operationally relevant, UNHCR engaged
them in bilateral meetings, and visited the camps they administer (UNHCR,
2014b), but was only authorised to implement directly through the state.
Others took risks by trying to conduct distributions independently of both the
Turkish and Kurdish authorities. Indeed, one INGO arranged for a group of
Acting as a parallel body to TRC, the Kurdish Red Crescent’s very existence consequently
troubles the neat organisational logic that one national society can serve all peoples in Turkey
while observing the movement’s other essential principles, notably: Humanity, Impartiality,
Neutrality and Independence.
36 Based on the author’s e-mail correspondence with potential funders, a number of would-be
individual donors sought a neutral organisation with a good track record and access to the
affected population, expressing their anxiety about possible legal repercussions should they
send funds internationally to a group perceived to be associated with the PKK.
Copyright @ 2016 KURDISH STUDIES © Transnational Press London
72 Mapping action and identity
civil society activists from Kobani to implement the delivery of their
commodities to the urban-based population in Suruç without the knowledge
of either the state or the municipality. While successfully bypassing the
coordination deadlock in this way presented a solution for a rapid response,
the most effective sustainable INGO interventions were conducted by those
maintaining relations with both Turkish and Kurdish authorities
simultaneously.
One interesting case is the engagement of the Turkish Red Crescent.
While, based on lessons learned from the Van earthquake, it might be
assumed that TRC would be situated squarely within the state-directed
response and therefore distance itself from pro-Kurdish actors, observations
from the ground in Suruç (particularly from the municipal depot) highlight a
good degree of field coordination with municipal authorities. Through its role
in border-crossing facilitation of previous aid deliveries to Kobani, TRC
members had already developed a “friendly” working relationship with the
municipality at the local level. Such pragmatic field relations led pro-Kurdish
actors to consider TRC as a useful facilitator with the institutions of the state,
while AFAD was more typically viewed as the unapproachable implementer
of state policy. Though TRC is a national ambassador acting on behalf of the
state, AFAD’s sovereign identity is coupled with perception of being an
uncompromising agent of the ruling AKP. Thus, the collaborative relationship
between TRC and the Kurdish municipalities in Suruç demonstrates the
sometimes blurred and negotiable boundary between state and society actors
in Turkey’s complex humanitarian infrastructure.
Conclusion
Through presenting the key actors engaged in the Kobani response, this
article has documented the clear presence of competing systems of
“governmentality” affecting humanitarian action in Suruç. The two broad
networks, associated with the Turkish state and pro-Kurdish movement
respectively, constitute largely parallel structures, conducting similar yet
uncoordinated activities. This dichotomy operates less on the level of
typological actor variation (i.e. public sector verses civil society) than through
the distinct political identities accompanying actions in the field. While all
actors may be motivated by a humanitarian imperative to respond to the
crisis, their engagements are framed through contrasting ideological
commitments. Kurdish relief actors generally express a sense of solidarity and
duty to assist their ethnic kin from across the border, while Turkish assistance
providers underscore the high capacity of the state to comprehensively meet
humanitarian needs within the national territory.
While the local authorities would ordinarily be one of the essential pillars
of a coordinated humanitarian response, the municipalities run by the Kurdish
party had, prior to the Kobani crisis, generally been treated by the state and
international bodies as non-conventional relief actors. The strategic position
www.KurdishStudies.net
McGee 73
of the pro-Kurdish municipalities to respond to the situation in Suruç,
however, presents a unique opportunity for the Kurdish movement and
associated relief bodies to gain exposure to the international humanitarian
community. Highlighting the municipality’s capacity to facilitate access to the
field as an alternative authority, this article applies to the context of
humanitarian action the “Yes, but …” re-assessment of the traditionally
assumed state-versus-society/oppressor and victim distinction in TurkishKurdish relations, as considered by recent literature (Watts, 2009).
Finally, it is hoped that the Kobani case study serves to elucidate some of
the complexities manifest more generally in relations between humanitarian
response actors. This article concludes by calling on those engaging practically
and academically in humanitarian action within situations of political
contention to further reflect on the implications of (ethno-national) identity
upon questions of disaster coordination and humanitarian access.
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