Reykjavík Grapevine


Reykjavík Grapevine - 19.11.2018, Blaðsíða 21

Reykjavík Grapevine - 19.11.2018, Blaðsíða 21
 21 The Reykjavík GrapevineIssue 19— 2018 Journalists in Syria got me in touch with the IFB, but in Turkish media there were all these reports that his body would be repatriated. I expected that his body would be sent to Iceland, and when I talked to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, my question wasn't 'if' I would get his body, but ‘how.’ I just wanted his death to be confirmed. I asked the Ministry to be in touch with Turkish authorities to identify his body. That hasn't happened yet. I don't know if the Turkish government has his body or just left it to rot.” Eva continues: “The Icelandic government says they're doing every- thing in their power, but 'everything in their power' obviously does not include asking the Turkish authorities what happened to the bodies of those who were killed. I really don't know what they have done. Every time I've asked them, they've told me that this is not possible, that this is not how things are done. It's possible they've asked this question, but then why not just tell me? I don't understand why they can't just ask them.” A MADDENING PROCESS The process that would unfold since then, which is still ongoing to this day, is one in which Icelandic authori- ties insist they are doing everything they can, but demonstrate an incred- ible amount of deference to Turkish authorities while not offering Eva much by way of pertinent information. “They say the Turkish authorities have confirmed that Haukur is dead,” she says. “How can they confirm he's dead if they don't have the body? I think it's strange. It's been seven months now, and Turkey still hasn't responded as to how they know that Haukur is dead. Why doesn't the Icelandic government do something more than just email them? Why don't they ask NATO for assistance, or the UN, or the European parliament? Why do they not ask for help if they can't do anything more themselves? It's Iceland's right to know what has happened to Icelan- dic citizens. I don't really see the Icelandic government doing anything significant. They've just been email- ing embassies. What are the embassies supposed to do? The Icelandic govern- ment is just doing a lot of things that are not likely to yield any results.” PUBLIC SUPPORT If there is any silver lining in this, it’s the level of public support Eva has been getting. “I think most people understand how we are feeling,” she says. “There are so many people in Iceland who have been through the experience that someone they love is missing and the body isn't found, or know someone who has been through this. The only people who seem to not understand what we're going through are the authorities.” One of the more common conten- tions that has been raised to explain the Icelandic government’s lackadaisi- cal attitude about Haukur’s disappear- ance is that, as a constant thorn in the side of Icelandic authorities, they are more than happy to be rid of him. Eva rejects this theory outright, attribut- ing how the Icelandic government has responded to more mundane elements. “I’ve wondered about this myself, but I don’t think this is the case. I think they are just incompetent and lack experience and understanding,” she says. “I don't think the inaction has anything to do with him being rebel- lious. I think they would not behave any better if he was an unknown person. Maybe they would have tried a course of action that's more efficient if he was related to someone in the government. I think the Icelandic government sees the Turkish government as allies, in some way, both being in NATO, and the Icelandic government has been doing some business with Turkey. I think it has more to do with that. I don't think they hate Haukur; I think they just don't care about him, just as they would not care about someone they had never heard of. They lack competence and the will to do something about.” Even in her time of confusion and grief, Eva sees her situation as being symptomatic of a larger problem. “This is not the only time that someone has gone missing and it seems that the police are not really investigating,” she says. “Of course, the Icelandic police don’t have jurisdiction in Turkey, but they do have an obliga- tion to Haukur and me and his family as Icelandic citizens. So even though they can't investigate this as though it had happened in Iceland, they are still obliged to get answers and do some- thing efficient about it. The police are either not skilled for such inves- tigations or they don't consider them important. They do good work if it has something to do with drugs or protests, but in too many occasions where citi- zens are under some kind of threat, like physical assault, it seems that they are not really ambitious." WHAT NOW? On September 28, the Ruling Commit- tee of Information Matters concluded that there are several documents that Eva is entitled to, but the Foreign Ministry has yet to hand them over. Rather, the Ministry has said that when they are done processing another information request that she filed, then they will take the commit- tee's conclusion into consideration. Further, the Parliamentary Ombuds- man has three times now asked the Foreign Ministry for a progress report. The Ministry only replied early in October, saying they are just about to do something about it. The whole process has left Eva feeling as though she is spinning her wheels. “I don't really feel as though I can take any steps,” she says. “What I have been trying for months is to get exact information about what they have been doing. So when I find out what they have been doing, then I can decide what I'm going to do next—if I'm going to travel to Turkey to find out for myself, which I don't think is a good idea, but maybe that'll be the only option. Maybe I can initiate legal proceedings to get the state to acknowledge my right to information. But first I must know what they have been trying to do.” REMEMBER HAUKUR’S REAL LEGACY Praise has certainly been heaped on Haukur’s memory since his death, from people around the world, who know him solely as yet another foreign fighter to be felled defending the Kurds against the Turks. Eva would rather not see him remembered this way. “I really wish that people who want to fight for justice and are compassion- ate towards oppressed groups would find some other way than joining an armed resistance movement,” she says. “I really hope Haukur won't be remem- bered for only that, because there are so many other things that he had done before. I hope that people who admire Haukur look to these things.” Anyone who knew Haukur and has been following this story since his reported death has likely asked them- selves: what would Haukur think of all this? Eva believes, if her situation and his were reversed, that Haukur would probably go much further. “Haukur didn't want the authori- ties to search for him,” she says. “He didn't want to have anything to do with them. Of course, he doesn't have a choice now; it's my right to know what happened to him. Haukur thought that even if he didn't want to have anything to do with authorities, the state is a fact that we have to contend with. Since we don't have any other choices, we are forced to pay taxes to the state, we are forced to follow the law of the state even if we didn't support this law or didn’t vote for the parties who created it. Because we have no choice but to respect the state. But the state also has obligations. He made this clear in many instances, especially regarding cultural and economic rights. I think that if he was in my shoes, he would be very angry at the government for not doing anything because as citizens, we don't just have obligations, we have rights. I think if I was the one who was lost, and he was the one dealing with the government, he would have done something far more significant than just raising the Turkish flag on top of the government offices like his brother did last June, or to write some blog posts about it like I've done. I think he would have found some other way to get his message through.” “When he was in kindergarten, he got a written assessment from his teacher, who said that Haukur was the mediator in the class; that he was the most peaceful of all these children and always wanted to take everyone's interests into account.” Photo: ??? Photo by Brian Sweeney Photo by Eva Hauks
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