(“Uncle”), the main leader of Turkey Kurds despite his incarceration.
The ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) co-founded by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has worked over recent years to find a solution to end the violence, granting modest reforms to the Kurdish minority.
Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu vowed that the government “would do what it takes” for success in the peace process, saying Turkey was entering a new period of unity.
“Let’s leave the anger aside and from now just focus on talks,” he told supporters in a speech in Istanbul.
“Let’s bury in the ground for ever the culture of hatred, the violence and the weapons. Let’s bury the pain of the mother of a martyr in the ground,” he said.
However the route to a final peace deal remains thorny, with Turkey preparing for legislative elections on June 7 and still shaken by the deaths of dozens in clashes during pro-Kurdish protests in October 2014.
Ocalan, who in February had called on the PKK to lay down their arms, did not specifically mention disarmament in this message.
The PKK has largely observed a ceasefire since 2013 but attempts to find a permanent deal have stalled over the issue of the withdrawal of PKK fighters and weaponry from Turkey.
The PKK’s military leaders, who are based in the Kandil Mountains of northern Iraq, have argued their should be no disarmament before a final settlement.
At least 40,000 people have been killed on both sides since the PKK formally began its insurgency in 1984 demanding self-rule for Turkey’s Kurds, who make up around 20 percent of the population. Bloodshed though had begun at least a decade before that.
The PKK is regarded as a terrorist group not only by Turkey but also by the United States and the European Union.
However it has also been working with Iraqi and Syrian Kurds in the US-backed campaign against Islamic State (IS) militants, with PKK fighters winning respect for their abilities.
Ocalan hailed as a “victory” and a “new symbol of history” the defeat by Kurdish fighters of IS Jihadists in the battle for the Syrian town of Kobane earlier this year.
Often described as the world’s largest stateless people after being denied their own country in the wake of World War I, Kurds are spread between Iran, Iraq, Syria and Turkey.
Migrants passing by a security guard. — AFP/FilePANAMA CITY: The number of US-bound migrants passing through the...
The wreckage of the Jeju Air aircraft that went off the runway and crashed at Muan International Airport lies near a...
Hindu monk Chinmoy Krishna Das. — AFP/FileCHITTAGONG: A Bangladeshi court on Thursday again denied bail to an...
Soldiers drive M60 tanks on a street as part of a military drill in Taichung, Taiwan. — Reuters/FileBEIJING: China...
One of the many excavated dinosaur footprints. —University of Birmingham/Dr Luke Meade/FileLONDON: British...
A police officer patrols the French Quarter in New Orleans, a day after a deadly truck attack marred New Year's Day....