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Revolutionary Communist League of Turkey

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Revolutionary Communist League of Turkey
Türkiye İhtilalci Komünistler Birliği
EstablishedFebruary 1979
FounderAktan İnce and associates
HeadquartersTurkey

The Revolutionary Communist League of Turkey, Union of Revolutionary Communists of Turkey[1][2] or Turkish Revolutionary Communists' Union[3][4] (Türkiye İhtilalci Komünistler Birliği, TİKB) is a Marxist-Leninist organization based in Turkey.

History and ideology

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The Revolutionary Communist League of Turkey was founded by a group also known as Aktancılar, after Aktan İnce, one of their early leaders. They were involved in the reorganization of the People's Liberation Army of Turkey in 1975.[5] In 1977 they split from the group involved with the journal Halkın Kurtuluşu, who later became the Revolutionary Communist Party of Turkey, and launched their own journal, Devrimci Proletarya ('Revolutionary Proletariat'). They took the name Türkiye İhtilalci Komünistler Birliği at a "congress of progressive militants" (İlerici Militanlar Toplantısı) held in February 1979.[6] They subsequently published two illegal magazines İhtilalci Komünist ('Revolutionary Communist'), for training militants, and Orak-Çekiç ('Hammer and Sickle'), on tactics.[7] In April 1980, the organization held its first conference in Istanbul. Like many other organizations, the TiKB was affected by the waves of arrests after the 1980 coup; it was rebuilt beginning in 1987–88 and resumed its activities in Turkey and abroad.[5]

At the organization's second conference in July 1992, Kenan Güngör, Selim Açan, and Yaşar Ayaşlı were elected to the central committee. The third conference was held in 1993 and the fourth in January 2010; both were the occasion of divisions,[2][6] one of which led to the foundation in 1995 of a TİKB-B, the B standing for "Bolshevik", which formed around the newsletter Proleter Devrimci Duruş ('Proletarian Revolutionary Attitude'). The first TİKB congress was held in September 2012. During the 2013 Gezi Park protests, the organization claimed Ethem Sarısülük, who was killed at a protest in Ankara in June 2013, as a TİKB militant.[7][8][9]

The organization describes Turkish society as "half-colonial and half-capitalist" and regards it as under American imperialist hegemony. It classifies the former Soviet Union as social-fascistic. It adheres to the Albanian model of socialism.[10] It sees violent revolution as necessary to overthrow bourgeois hegemony and inaugurate the dictatorship of the proletariat.[7]

Activities

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Before the 1980 coup, TİKB engaged in violent clashes with other organizations, leading to deaths of both its supporters and rival adherents.[11] It later disavowed this violence.[6] Under a rubric of "socialization" (kamulaştırma), it has attacked jewelers, foreign exchange offices, and banks; further targets have been security forces and political parties, particularly the Nationalist Movement Party, which it classifies as fascist.[7]

In a 1996 report by Amnesty International, TİKB is described as an armed opposition group responsible for human rights violations.[4][12] In addition to Turkish activities such as involvement in the Gazi protests, TİKB has also been active in other countries, particularly Germany, where it held its first conference in January 2001.[citation needed]

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After the 1980 coup, some members of the Revolutionary Communist League were arrested and sentenced to long prison terms. Some died while undergoing torture; others were shot dead while trying to evade arrest.[5] The organization has expressed pride in not having withdrawn from Turkey during this period, and has said that of 8 members of its central committee who were arrested, only one confessed and that 90% of arrested militants refused to confess to the police; according to the organization, it has the largest number of militants to have not confessed under torture.[7] According to an October 1982 report by the independent organization Alternative Türkeihilfe [de], court martial proceedings in Istanbul and Ankara included 113 defendants who were accused of being members of TİKB, with the death penalty being requested in 22 cases.[13] A press review in June 1986 found 186 trials of people accused of TİKB membership, of which 6 resulted in death sentences.[14]

Accused members of the Revolutionary Communist League have continued to be prosecuted in Turkey, for example:

  • On April 4, 1998, the State Security Court in Ankara ruled in a case against five people accused of committing crimes as members of TİKB. One was found innocent, one was sentenced to 12 and a half years in prison, and three (Adem Kepeneklioğlu, Turan Tarakçı, and Mehmet Hakan Canpolat) were sentenced to death.[15]
  • On July 20, 2001, of 21 defendants accused of being members of TİKB and committing crimes including the killing of a police officer in Istanbul in January 2001, three (Erdinç Yücel, Erkan Altun, and Yüksel Okuyucu) were sentenced to death.[16]
  • In September 2008, the trial in Istanbul of 22 people accused of crimes on behalf of the TİKB including three murders (of Emrah Sarıtaş and Ergin Topal on August 2, 1995, and Deniz Birinci on June 23, 1998) ended with two defendants being sentenced to life imprisonment and three (Gürbüz Aydemir, Ulaş Dil, and Yüksel Yiğitdoğan) to aggravated life imprisonment (the replacement for capital punishment, which was abolished in 2004).[17] In March 2010, the European Court of Human Rights ruled that Yiğitdoğan had not been tried in accordance with the European Convention on Human Rights.[18]

Detained members of TİKB have repeatedly participated in hunger strikes by political prisoners in Turkey. Some of them have lost their lives in the actions known as death fasts. Haydar Başbağ and M. Fatih Öktülmüş died during the hunger strike in the Metris military prison in 1984. During the hunger strike in the summer of 1996, the militant prisoners of the organization Tahsin Yılmaz, Hicabi Küçük and Osman Akgün lost their lives.[19] After the storming of 20 prisons on December 19, 2000, in which 30 prisoners and two soldiers lost their lives, TİKB prisoners also joined the death fast that had begun. Tuncay Günel, Ali Çamyar, Lale Çolak and Okan Külekçi, who were accused of being members of the TİKB, died.[20][21][22]

Publications

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Towards the end of the 1970s, the TiKB published a legal journal called Devrimci Proleterya. After its reactivation in the second half of the 1980s, it also published the legal magazine Alınteri and the illegal magazine Orak-Cekiç.[19] There have been many proceedings against the magazine Alınteri, in which the respective editors-in-chief in particular have been sentenced to fines or imprisonment.[19] Cases have also been reported in which readers of the legal journal were treated as members of the illegal organization TİKB.[21]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Union of Revolutionary Communists of Turkey (TIKB), International Coordination of Revolutionary Parties and Organizations, retrieved January 7, 2025.
  2. ^ a b "Final Declaration of the 4th Conference of the TİKB", TİKB, July 11, 2019.
  3. ^ Terrorism Review, Central Intelligence Agency, December 22, 1983, p. 7.
  4. ^ a b "Union of Revolutionary Communists of Turkey (TIKB); its student wing, Democratic University Platform (DUP); and where they are present in Turkey, their numbers and their activities", Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada, September 11, 2001, via European Country of Origin Information Network, retrieved January 7, 2025.
  5. ^ a b c "Türkei-Turquie" Swiss Refugee Council, April 1997 (in German).
  6. ^ a b c "TİKB (Türkiye İhtilalci Komünistler Birliği), Terör Örgütleri.com, archived from the original on September 7, 2014 (in Turkish).
  7. ^ a b c d e "TİKB KISA TARİHİ…", TİKB, archived from the original on September 7, 2014 (in Turkish).
  8. ^ "Announcement of the Union of Revolutionary Communists of Turkey (TİKB): The working class has lost a brave son who devotedly dedicated his everything to his class, including his life...", International Coordination of Revolutionary Parties and Organizations, June 12, 2013, archived from the original on June 30, 2013].
  9. ^ "Ethem Sarısülük TİKB'liymiş", Hürriyet, June 19, 2016 (in Turkish).
  10. ^ "TİKB Amaç ve Stratejisi", Terör Örgütleri.com, archived from the original on September 7, 2014 (in Turkish); also "'Die Linke hat schwere Fehler begangen'", interview, Sozialismus.info, September 16, 2010 (in German).
  11. ^ "Halkın Kurtuluşu Devrimci Proletarya Çatışması", Nesra, November 1, 2013 (in Turkish).
  12. ^ "Turkey: No security without human rights", Amnesty International, 1996, archived from the original on September 15, 2024.
  13. ^ "Sonderinfo 2: Massenprozesse in der Türkei: komplette Dokumentation der Pressenberichte vom 12.09.80 – 30.09.82", Alternative Türkeihilfe, October 1982 (in German).
  14. ^ Helmut Oberdiek, "Mass Trials and Death Penalties", October 5, 2012, archived from the original on May 17, 2016; "Verhängte Todesstrafen", June 20, 1986 (in German).
  15. ^ "Sol örgüt davasında 3 idam cezası verildi", Daily Sabah, April 4, 1998 (in Turkish).
  16. ^ "21 TİKB'li hakim önündeydi", NTVMSNBC, July 20, 2001 (in Turkish).
  17. ^ "TİKB davasında 5 kişiye müebbet hapis", NTVMSNBC, September 12, 2008, archived from the original on November 13, 2012 (in Turkish).
  18. ^ "Affaire Yiğitdoğan c. Turquie: Requête no 20827/08", European Court of Human Rights, June 16, 2010 (in French).
  19. ^ a b c Die auszugsweise Übersetzung und ein Hintergrund zu dem Fall ist beim Demokratischen Türkeiforum unter Meinungsfreiheit verletzt: Buchautorin Nevin Berktaş kommt in Haft zu finden; abgerufen am 6.
  20. ^ Siehe die Jahresberichte der TIHV Annual Report for 2001 (PDF; 1,8 MB) und Annual Report for 2002 (PDF; 1,5 MB)
  21. ^ a b Im Internet ist eine komplette Wiedergabe des Werkes als PDF-Datei Archived 2014-09-07 at the Wayback Machine vorhanden.
  22. ^ Das Buch mit dem gleichen Titel Adressiz Sorgular erschien 2014 im Verlag Şubat, ISBN 978-6-05634-875-4.