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Kurds: We will annul the Treaty of Lausanne and the Turkish national pact- Implications for Greece

The Vice President of the Executive Council of the KCK (Union of Kurdistan Communities) sets a big "Fire" that also concerns Greece by sending a message about the celebration of Norvio in the area of Mount Qandil in Northern Iraq.

Highlighting the 100th anniversary of the Treaty of Lausanne, Bayık stressed that this agreement must be "broken".

"We are going to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the Treaty of Lausanne by "breaking" it.
The Kurdish slaughter has been done so far through this treaty. Now, our people must "break" this policy and alliance and pave the way for a free and dignified life for themselves. This should be accepted by all.

Our people must express that they want to live freely in their lands. We accept nothing else. Everyone should recognize this. Let's abolish the Lausanne alliance. We are in the final phase and everyone must understand this and aim for victory.

The Turkish AKP-MHP alliance must be overthrown to pave the way for a democratic democracy in Turkey. Rebels are making history in the mountains of Kurdistan.

The rebels did not allow the genocidal Turkish state to achieve its goals. Our rebels have defeated the Turkish state.

The Kurdish rebels did not allow the genocidal Turkish state to fully occupy Northern Iraq, nor did they allow Turkey to realize the goal of the Turkish National Pact", he emphasized among others.

What will Greece do in the face of these plans which unfortunately coincide with the Turkish ones in the Aegean and Eastern Mediterranean?

The clouds of war are gathering in our region, in which tensions based on huge interests related to ethnic, energy and strategic issues are increasing.

In recent years, Turkey, with various methods and objections, has indirectly but clearly attempted to revise the Treaty of Lausanne, on the basis of which the borders with its neighboring countries and therefore also with Greece were drawn.

However, any revision of the Treaty in question would also mean a review by the International Community even of the creation of a Kurdish state, something that Turkey is afraid of, while many Turks believe that there are secret clauses in the Treaty of Lausanne.

Since the signing of the Treaty of Lausanne in 1923, secular nationalists, or Kemalists, followers of former president Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, have seen the treaty as a great victory, while Islamists portray it in the opposite way even today, pursuing conspiracy theories to succeed in their plans.

In Turkey there is now an established belief that "a great conspiracy is being prepared against the Turkish people" by the US and the West".

A new "Lausanne", however, in a hypothetical scenario, would be the result of a serious conflict with "military means", between Greeks and Turks in the Aegean and Eastern Mediterranean", the leader of the Kurds M. Karagilian had stated some time ago, who he certainly knows a lot, especially about the Turks.

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