Saturday Mothers meet in Istanbul for the 698th week

The story of Ibrahim Kartay who disappeared in 1994 was told.

The Saturday Mothers met in Istanbul’s Galatasaray Square for the 698th week to demand justice and the truth about the disappeared people of Turkey and Kurdistan. 

The Mothers and those who joined the sit-in opened the traditional banners and displayed the photos of the disappeared, in what has become a traditional sight on a Saturday at midday, no matter the weather.

This week the Saturday Mothers were asking justice for Ibrahim Kartay, who disappeared after being taken into custody on 15 August 1994 in Amed (Diyarbakır).

The first to speak was Hasan Karakoç, brother of Ridvan, who was detained in 1994 and whose body was found in 1995.

Reminding that in Turkey, thousands of people share the same destiny as Ridvan Karakoç, his brother Hasan said: "This was something done by officers wearing your uniform".

Karakoç directly addressed the state authorities, "You are protecting your murderous executioners. We have been here for 23 years and we will be here for another 23 years. We will seek justice for as much as a hundred years, if necessary”.

After Karakoç, it was Ikbal Eren who spoke about his brother Hayrettin who disappeared on 21 November 1980.

"We have been meeting in Galatasaray for 698 weeks, asking to the state institutions for the people who disappeared and were killed under custody”.

Eren asked the state why it does not “fulfill the task of carrying out effective and independent investigations that will finally tell what happened to our relatives who disappeared while in custody?"

Eren told the story of Ibrahim Kartay, who was taken into custody on 15 August 1994, as the result of an operation carried out by soldiers in villages belonging to Hani, Amed.

"One of the villages surrounded by soldiers early that morning, was Gomeç, some 19 kilometres from Hani. Hundreds of soldiers entered the village and ordered people to move out. They began to burn down the houses without giving villagers the time to get their stuff”.

Ibrahim Kartay, 29, had to leave the village with his family, his 6 months pregnant wife and three young children.

Kartay went into his house, which had not yet been burned, to get food. He took some cheese, tomato paste and bread, and went out to meet his family.

He had traveled a short distance when he was detained by soldiers. His wife, Salime Cakir, waited for him at the village entrance, and was later informed by the villagers that Ibrahim was taken into custody.

Salime Cakir went with her children to the neighboring village and waited for her husband. Ten days had passed and no news of Kartay. So his wife went to Hani to the prosecutor’s office with her father-in-law to get news of her husband.

When the prosecutor's office gave no answer, she went to the gendarmerie station.

There, the gendarmes told Kadri Kartay that his son was “a terrorist, but we have released him. We do not know where he went”.

But Kartay did not return home, so his father went again to the Gendarmerie station only to be fired at and threatened by gendarmes should he go back again.

One of the villagers sent a message to the family saying that he had been kept in custody for 8 days together with Ibrahim and that Ibrahim had told him that he feared for his life.

Twenty one years have gone by and finally someone told the family that Ibrahim Kartay might by buried in a spot next to the graveyard in Hani district center.

With this information, his wife and son applied to the Hani Public Prosecutor's Office through the Human Rights Association (IHD) Diyarbakır Branch.

The Prosecutor’s office gave permission to the family to excavate the place. On 3 June 2015, remains of bones along with pieces of clothes were found.

The bones were sent to Istanbul Forensic Medicine Institute for identification test. However, Forensic Medicine explained that the DNA in the bones were incompatible with the DNA samples taken from the family.

Kartay's wife, Salime Cakir has been looking for her husband for 24 years and said she would continue her search as long as she lives, because she wants justice and the truth about her husband’s fate.