Document #1256704
IRB – Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (Author)
Subsequent to Response to Information
Request TUR12569 of 14 January 1993, please note the following
information. According to Revolutionary and Dissident
Movements, TIKKO is the acronym for the Turkish Worker Peasant
Liberation Army (TWPLA)(1991, 349), which has also been known as
the Turkish Revolutionary Peasants' Liberation Army (Communist
and Marxist Parties 1990, 158) as well as the Turkish Workers'
and Peasants' Liberation Army (Political Handbook of the World:
1992 1992, 783).
A history professor at McGill University
with expertise on Turkey, provided the following information during
a telephone interview on 8 November 1994. He indicated that TIKKO
is an illegal, armed resistance movement which has adopted a
Marxist-Leninist ideology. TIKKO advocates the violent overthrow of
the Turkish government and abolition of the entire Turkish
political system. The professor characterized the movement as
relatively small, consisting of a maximum of several thousand
people, and not necessarily composed of workers or peasants as the
name might indicate. Membership in the movement is scattered in
small cells throughout the country. The professor was not aware of
formal links between TIKKO and other armed resistance movements
such as the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) (8 November 1994).
A professor at Carleton University with
expertise on Turkey, indicated in a telephone interview on 8
November 1994 that TIKKO is an illegal, terrorist organization
which continues to operate in Turkey (8 November 1994). According
to the professor, TIKKO is a smaller group than PKK or Dev-Sol
(Revolutionary Left) and its objective is the establishment of a
Marxist-Leninist political system in Turkey. He also added that
TIKKO has links to other international terrorist organizations in
Syria and with other western underground cells (ibid.).
According to Revolutionary and Dissident
Movements, TIKKO is a Kurdish terrorist organization which was
founded by Ibrahim Kaypakkaya during the 1970s (1991, 348-349).
According to the same source, the Communist Party of Turkey/Marxist
Leninist (TKP/ML) is TIKKO's political wing (ibid.). Communist
and Marxist Parties of the World reports that TKP/ML was
established in 1973 by Ibrahim Kaypakkay in 1973 and that TKP/ML
was involved with terrorist activities (1990, 158). It also
indicates that TKP/ML attempted to establish a Turkish
Revolutionary Peasants' Liberation Army (ibid.). It does not
indicate any Kurdish connections.
The Political Handbook of the World
describes TIKKO as one of a number of extremist, terrorist groups
established before 1980 and indicates that its activities have
declined in recent years (1992, 783). A media article reported on 3
February 1994 that Turkish police had raided a number of leftist
underground organizations, including TKP/ML TIKKO, which it
described as the "military wing of the outlawed Turkish Communist
Party-Marxist Leninist (AP)."
Media reports have linked TIKKO with a
number of recent terrorist attacks in Turkey (BBC Summary 31 Oct.
1994; ibid. 27 April 1994; Reuters 16 Mar. 1993; ibid. 10 Feb.
1993). Other media sources report that Turkish security forces and
police have launched extensive raids at both urban and rural
headquarters of TIKKO members, who appear to have joined forces
with the PKK and Dev-Sol (Toronto Star 11 Oct. 1994; Reuters 3 Oct.
1994).
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.
Associated Press (AP). 3 February 1994.
"Police Arrest Leftist Militants, Seize Dynamite Sticks."
(NEXIS)
BBC Summary of World Broadcasts. 31
October 1994. "Internal and Security Reports; Bomb Explodes at
Istanbul Mosque Slightly Injuring Carrier." (NEXIS)
BBC Summary of World Broadcasts. 27
April 1994. "Explosives Thrown at Istanbul Banks." (NEXIS)
Communist and Marxist Parties of the
World. 1990. 2nd ed. Compiled by Charles Hobday. Revised and
updated by Roger East. Chicago: St. James Press.
Political Handbook of the World:
1992. 1992. Edited by Arthur S. Banks. Binghampton, NY: CSA
Publications.
Professor of history at McGill
University, Montreal. 8 November 1994. Telephone interview.
Professor of international affairs at
Carleton University, Ottawa. 8 November 1994. Telephone
interview.
Reuters. BC Cycle. 3 October 1994. Firat
Bakir. "Turkey Doubles Forces in Attack on Rebel Kurds."
(NEXIS)
_____. BC Cycle. 16 March 1993. "Bombs
Wound Seven in Turkish Cities." (NEXIS)
_____. BC Cycle. 10 February 1993.
"Turkish Police Detain 12 Suspected Leftists." (NEXIS)
Revolutionary and Dissident
Movements: An International Guide. 1991. 3rd ed. London:
Longman Group UK.
The Toronto Star. Final edition.
11 October 1994. "Turkish Security Forces Fight Alliance of Kurds,
Leftists." (NEXIS)
Associated Press (AP). 3 February 1994.
"Police Arrest Leftist Militants, Seize Dynamite Sticks."
(NEXIS)
BBC Summary of World Broadcasts. 31
October 1994. "Internal and Security Reports; Bomb Explodes at
Istanbul Mosque Slightly Injuring Carrier." (NEXIS)
BBC Summary of World Broadcasts. 27
April 1994. "Explosives Thrown at Istanbul Banks." (NEXIS)
Communist and Marxist Parties of the
World. 1990. 2nd ed. Compiled by Charles Hobday. Revised and
updated by Roger East. Chicago: St. James Press, pp. 158-163.
Political Handbook of the World:
1992. 1992. Edited by Arthur S. Banks. Binghampton, NY: CSA
Publications, pp. 783.
Reuters. BC Cycle. 3 October 1994. Firat
Bakir. "Turkey Doubles Forces in Attack on Rebel Kurds."
(NEXIS)
_____. BC Cycle. 16 March 1993. "Bombs
Wound Seven in Turkish Cities." (NEXIS)
_____. BC Cycle. 10 February 1993.
"Turkish Police Detain 12 Suspected Leftists." (NEXIS)
Revolutionary and Dissident
Movements: An International Guide. 1991. 3rd ed. London:
Longman Group UK, pp.346-350.
The Toronto Star. Final edition.
11 October 1994. "Turkish Security Forces Fight Alliance of Kurds,
Leftists." (NEXIS)