NEWS CENTER – The leader Abdullah Ocalan, who has been detained in Imrali Island prison in the Sea of Marmara since February 15, 1999, has been subjected to strict isolation, as no information has been obtained from the leader and his three companions in prison for more than two years.
The head of the Women’s Body in the Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria, Adalat Omar, confirmed that “the leader’s physical freedom means our freedom, as we cannot say that we are free if we cannot liberate our leader.”
She explained that the leader Abdullah Ocalan divided his personal and organizational life into 3 stages, and considered each of these stages a birth for him. His first birth, according to what Adalat Omar mentioned, begins with his going to primary school, how he tried to establish his community, his rebellion, and his reactions against the concepts of family and village.
As for the second stage, it begins with his estrangement from bourgeois society, and the establishment of an ideological group according to a socio-political system, referring to the peculiarity of the third stage, which begins with his analysis of history again, enabling him to reach the roots of issues in the region, analyzing the problems and crises he is experiencing, and finding a way out for them, starting from disconnection from the state and from the life of capitalism.
She mentioned a number of issues on which leader Abdullah Ocalan deepened, such as the issue of women’s liberation by shedding light on the exploitation of women throughout history, turning them into slaves and commodities, and distancing them from their true essence.
She noted that the ideology of women’s liberation contributed greatly to women’s leadership of the revolution in North and East Syria, and distinguished it from other revolutions, such as the French revolution, in which women did not obtain any rights.
“What was lacking for women in these revolutions was that they were unable to organize themselves in particular, despite the existence of many feminist movements and organizations,” in the words of the head of the Women’s Body, who indicated that the popular uprising in Rojhelat Kurdistan and Iran had adopted the philosophy of leader Abdullah. Ocalan under the slogan “Jin, Jiyan, Azadî” (Women, Life, Freedom).
Adalat Omar, the head of the Women’s Body in the Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria, stressed, at the end of her speech, to continue reading the pleadings of the leader Abdullah Ocalan, and to properly implement his projects on the ground, and she said, “Whenever we can implement the leader’s theses on the ground, we will be able to lift the isolation imposed on him.” and physically free him.