Terror-free Türkiye laws in the making, timetable still unclear
PKK members line up to put their weapons into a pit during a ceremony to mark the beginning of disarmament, Sulaimaniyah, northern Iraq, July 11, 2025. (AFP Photo)

Media outlets report new steps in the terror-free Türkiye plan in terms of a framework law to speed up the process in July, while the AK Party says the PKK terrorist group’s disarmament is still too slow



It has been more than two years since the terror-free Türkiye initiative informally began. The PKK terrorist group announced it would comply with the call to disarm, and authorities signaled they would implement laws to accommodate the needs of the process. However, the process appears to be dragging on, something linked to the slow pace of disarmament.

Sources close to the ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party) and its ally Nationalist Movement Party (MHP), whose leader Devlet Bahçeli first touted the idea of the initiative, told media outlets that the legal amendments to advance the process would likely be presented to Parliament in July and may be enacted before Parliament’s summer recess in August.

The framework law, as it is dubbed by the Turkish media, consists of several articles that are expected to address the future of PKK members after their disarmament. Though the contents are still unclear, they are expected to include partial amnesty for those not actively involved in terrorist attacks. Sources told BBC Turkish that the law would be "temporary” and will be implemented only after it is verified that the PKK has fully abandoned weapons.

The PKK had taken the first step to end its more than 40-year campaign of terrorism in May 2025, announcing it would dissolve itself. In July 2025, the group held a ceremony in northern Iraq, with terrorists literally burning their weapons on the path to complete dissolution. All these moves were a culmination of the initiative launched by Bahçeli, who has called on the group’s jailed ringleader, Abdullah Öcalan, to urge the PKK to lay down arms, and Öcalan has replied positively, making the said call in February 2025.

The initiative is largely proceeding in secrecy, except for visits to Öcalan by the members of pro-PKK Peoples’ Equality and Democracy Party (DEM Party) and for regular meetings of the National Solidarity, Brotherhood and Democracy Committee, set up by Parliament to provide guidelines for the process.

AK Party spokesperson Ömer Çelik on Tuesday confirmed the reports regarding the framework law. Speaking to broadcaster Habertürk, Çelik said it was not the government delaying the process. Responding to the criticism that the process has slowed, Çelik said it was the terrorist group that has not taken the effective steps for disarmament.

"Every process has its own rhythm. Sometimes a month's journey is completed in a day, sometimes a day's journey takes a month,” he said. "There is no satisfactory level of disarmament yet; there is only rhetoric and a general outline,” he added.

"We have now reached a new stage. A legal framework is needed for (the PKK) to completely lay down its arms. This framework would be tied to the condition of disarmament."

He emphasized that the proposed framework would only come into force if disarmament actually occurs.

Çelik stressed that there is a clear political will to implement legal regulations that would take effect once disarmament is achieved.

He also stated that a mechanism would be established to verify full disarmament, and this could involve the establishment of a separate state body for verification, decisions by the National Security Council (NSC), and reports by relevant state institutions, namely security agencies and ministries.

No delays

President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan on Wednesday said the framework law will be presented to Parliament without much delay, as he hailed "a significant milestone" in the process.

Erdoğan told a parliamentary group meeting of the AK Party that they have adhered to the initiative "with patience and common sense" despite "sabotage attempts." He pointed out an attack by the PKK on the defense company Turkish Aerospace Industries (TAI) in 2024 as one of those attempts.

He said the situation of the YPG, the Syrian wing of the PKK, was another issue protracting the disarmament, and it was largely resolved as well, "thanks to the inclusive approach of Syrian President al-Sharaa." The YPG resisted joining the PKK for disarmament and reneged on a deal with the post-Baathist administration in Syria for integration with the post-Assad army. After sporadic clashes and offensives by the Syrian army, it finally agreed on integration and is now involved in an ongoing process to that extent.

"Although the integration process faces various challenges, it is being successfully implemented. We are also closely following the process and providing the necessary contribution," Erdoğan said.

"The Iran crisis has proven that the process is of vital importance not only for our country and region but also for our Kurdish brothers and sisters. Thanks to the positive atmosphere and dialogue channels provided by the process, greater instances of sedition that would also harm our Kurdish brothers and sisters have been prevented. It will be seen more clearly in the future what a bloody and insidious game we have disrupted as Turks, Kurds, Arabs and (Iranians). It will be better understood how our region returned from the brink of an abyss. Everyone must finally accept this: Terrorism is a dead end and has run its course," Erdoğan said as he highlighted the importance of the dissolution process.