Abdullah Ocalan, the detained Kurdistan Workers Party leader, issued a statement Friday calling for peace-focused legislation to help Turkey transition toward democratic integration. His remarks come one year after he urged his militant organization to abandon its insurgency and dissolve.

ANKARA – The imprisoned leader of a Kurdish militant organization released a statement Friday urging Turkey to enact legislation focused on peace as part of moving toward democratic integration within the country.
Abdullah Ocalan, who heads the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), delivered his message exactly one year after making a historic appeal for his group to abandon its long-running armed rebellion and dissolve entirely. Representatives from the pro-Kurdish DEM Party delivered Ocalan’s latest statement during a news conference.
Ocalan’s previous appeal to end the insurgency sparked optimism that Turkey’s prolonged conflict might finally conclude. The decades-long fighting has resulted in over 40,000 deaths, created significant social rifts, and hampered economic progress throughout Turkey’s predominantly Kurdish southeastern regions. However, meaningful advancement toward resolution has remained limited since that initial call for peace.
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