Kurdish alphabet to be unified -Diyarbakır Kurdish National Language Conference
The 200 Kurdish expatriate linguists hailed from a variety of countries, including Syria, Iran, Iraq and Canada, as well as from Europe and the Caucasus region.
Mardin independent deputy and Democratic Society Congress (DTK) co-leader Ahmet Turk participated in the conference and said that the Kurdish people’s history will no longer include violence and lack of recognition.
“Studies are being done in four separate parts of Kurdistan. This is the time for the Kurds,” Turk said.
The concluding statement of the conference outlined several goals, including the standardization of the Kurdish language through a unified alphabet, the use of Kurdish in university education, and the establishment of a Kurdish language institution. The statement also condemned political and military operations on Kurds and suggested a dialogue for negotiation.