In late 2024, the Turkish government opened what it termed a path to a “terror-free Türkiye” — a renewed initiative to resolve the four-decade conflict with the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) through disarmament rather than continued military confrontation. That initiative gained significant momentum in 2025 with a public statement from imprisoned PKK founder Abdullah Öcalan calling on the organization to convene a congress and disband. By February 2026, the Turkish parliament’s commission on the peace process had agreed on legal frameworks that could open a path to conditional release for prisoners serving aggravated life sentences, including, potentially, Öcalan himself and former HDP co-chair Selahattin Demirtaş, in prison since November 4, 2016. This post explains where the process now stands, what specifically would have to change for Demirtaş to be released, and what the implications are for the broader category of political prisoners in Turkey.
The peace initiative announced on October 22, 2024 is structurally different from earlier Turkish-Kurdish peace processes (most notably the 2013–15 round, which collapsed). Three components distinguish it:
The “right to hope” is established in Council of Europe jurisprudence: a person serving a life sentence must have a meaningful chance of sentence review and potential release. Sentences that are de facto permanent without any review mechanism violate Article 3 of the European Convention (prohibition of inhuman or degrading treatment).
Turkey’s “aggravated life imprisonment” sentence has been challenged on this exact ground. Multiple ECtHR judgments have signaled that, as currently structured, Turkish aggravated life sentences are inconsistent with the right to hope.
The legal reform now being drafted in the parliamentary commission would, in essence:
The framework would apply, on its face, to all prisoners serving aggravated life sentences. In practice, the political question is which prisoners would actually be released through it.
Selahattin Demirtaş is the most internationally recognized Kurdish political figure currently imprisoned in Turkey. He served as co-chair of the Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) until his detention on November 4, 2016. He was the HDP’s presidential candidate in the 2014 and 2018 elections. He has been imprisoned for nine and a half years.
The European Court of Human Rights has ruled — twice — that his detention violates the European Convention. The Grand Chamber’s 2018 judgment (Demirtaş v. Turkey (No. 2)) found violations of Articles 5 (right to liberty), 10 (freedom of expression), 18 (limits on use of restrictions on rights), and Article 3 of Protocol 1 (free elections). The judgment ordered his release. Turkey has not implemented it.
His case is therefore significant on two distinct dimensions:
Both matter. They are not the same thing.
It is important to be precise about what the peace process is and is not promising.
In other words: even in the most optimistic scenario, the peace process would resolve one important category of cases. It would leave most of what AST documents — the everyday prosecutorial machinery against journalists, lawyers, and civil society — largely untouched.
Three specific markers will tell observers whether the process is generating real change:
If the legal framework passes but those three indicators do not move, the process is — to use a precise term — symbolic. If they do move, it is structural.
Three risk factors are publicly identified:
Each of these is a real risk, not a hypothetical one.
European governments and institutions have leverage that is most useful when applied specifically:
These are not maximalist asks. They are calibrated to the moment of opportunity that the peace process represents.
AST documents the people the system has silenced. The Kurdish peace process — if it produces real releases, real restorations of elected officials, real procedural protections — is one of the few mechanisms that could meaningfully reduce the population of silenced people in Turkey. That is a development worth watching closely, supporting where it produces real change, and challenging where it produces only rhetoric.
It is also a moment to remember that the people who would benefit most directly — Demirtaş, Yüksekdağ, Öcalan, and the broader population of Kurdish political prisoners — are individual people with families and decades of advocacy work behind them. The peace process is not an abstraction. It is, at its center, a question about whether named individuals will continue to grow old in prison or be released to participate in public life.
That is the question AST and its partner organizations will keep asking, on every individual case, until it is answered.
A renewed Kurdish peace process is, on its terms, the most significant opening in Turkish political-prisoner advocacy since 2015. Whether it becomes the most significant outcome depends on what happens between now and the end of 2026.
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Sources: Turkish Minute, “Erdoğan ally calls for freeing Öcalan, Demirtaş in peace push with PKK” (February 3, 2026); Turkish Minute, “Parliamentary commission backs legal steps that could pave way for Öcalan’s release” (February 4, 2026); European Policy Centre, “Türkiye’s renewed Kurdish peace process: Implications for Europe”; Kurdistan24, “DEM Party: Turkey must release Demirtas, resume peace talks with Ocalan”; PBS NewsHour, “Imprisoned Kurdish leader urges his PKK militant group to disarm”; ECtHR, Demirtaş v. Turkey (No. 2) Grand Chamber judgment (2018).
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