Document #1149210
IRB – Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (Author)
The latest information available to the
DIRB on the Turkish Revolutionary Communist Party or Türkiye
Devrimci Komünist Partisi (TDKP) dates back to 1990-1991. An
11 March 1990 Reuters report describes a siege that took place in
Istambul during which one of the gunmen involved claimed to belong
to the "little known" Turkish Revolutionary Communist Party. The
police described the men as terrorists (ibid.). Revolutionary
and Dissident Movements mentions the PDKP and its "violent"
Armed Popular Units under the heading "Illegal Left-Wing Groups"
(1991, 346). The same source adds that those units are also
referred to as "People in a Hurry." For further information on its
involvement in terrorist activities, please refer to the attached
documents.
This response was prepared after
researching publicly accessible information currently available to
the DIRB within time constraints. This response is not, and does
not purport to be, conclusive as to the merit of any particular
claim to refugee status or asylum.
Reuters. 11 March 1990. BC Cycle. Ayse
Sarioglu. "Gunman Wounded, Hostages Freed in Istambul Siege."
(NEXIS)
Revolutionary and Dissident
Movements: An International Guide. 1991. 3rd edition. Harlow,
Essex: Longman Group UK Ltd.
Inter Press Service (IPS). 25 July 1991.
Nadire Mater. "Turkey: Furor Over Impact of Anti-Terrorism Law
Amendment." (NEXIS)
Reuters. 11 March 1990. BC Cycle. Ayse
Sarioglu. "Gunman Wounded, Hostages Freed in Istambul Siege."
(NEXIS)
_____. 13 December 1989. BC Cycle.
"Turkish Demonstrators Fire Pistols as Students, Police Clash."
(NEXIS)
_____. 16 February 1989. AM Cycle. "Case
of Boy Held as Communist Sparks Outcry." (NEXIS)
Revolutionary and Dissident
Movements: An International Guide. 1991. 3rd edition. Harlow,
Essex: Longman Group UK Ltd.
The Times [London]. 12 March
1990. Rasit Gurdilek. "SAS-Style Teams End Istambul Siege."
(NEXIS)
On-Line searches of news articles.
Oral Sources.