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Siverek

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Siverek
CountryTurkey
ProvinceŞanlıurfa
Government
 • MayorResul Yılmaz (AKP)
 • KaymakamHamsa Erkal
Area
 • District4,366.84 km2 (1,686.05 sq mi)
Population
 • Urban
Template:Turkey district populations
 • District
Template:Turkey district populations
Post code
63600
Websitewww.siverek.bel.tr

Siverek (Template:Lang-ku) is a town and district in the south-east of Turkey, in Şanlıurfa Province. Population 107,634 (town); 247,000 (district) (2000 census).

Siverek is in Şanlıurfa province but closer geographically to the large city of Diyarbakır (approx 83 km). In the Ottoman Empire period Siverek was within Diyarbekir Vilayet, and the people of Siverek are said to be reluctant to accept being part of Şanlıurfa even today.[citation needed]

In the countryside the people are mostly ethnic Kurd. There is also a Turkmen community in the village of Karacadağ and a small number of Arabs. The people are poor and live by working in the fields here and as sharecroppers in the villages of neighbouring Diyarbakır.

The town produces ayran.

Politics

In common with other districts of Şanlıurfa business and politics in Siverek are strongly influenced, even controlled, by a powerful clan. Siverek is the home town of Sedat Bucak, the former DYP member of parliament who survived the car crash in the Susurluk scandal. He is the leader of the Bucak clan, one of whom has represented the area in the Turkish Parliament since its foundation. Sedat Bucak remains a friend of current DYP leader Mehmet Ağar.[2]

The Bucak clan are Zaza people who moved to Siverek from nearby Diyarbakır in the 1800s. They have always been loyal to the Turkish state, particularly during the Shaikh Said uprising in the 1920s. They were members of the party of Adnan Menderes' Demokrat Parti but survived the coup that deposed Menderes in 1960. The Bucak were also active in the struggle against the Kurdish separatist PKK. In the 1970s the Bucak family were targeted by the PKK and they continued to actively oppose the PKK all through the 1990s and beyond. During this period hundreds of members of the Bucak clan were employed by the state as village guards in Siverek and Hilvan. The area was the scene of kidnappings, disappearances and assassinations across the political spectrum in this period.[3][4]

References

  1. ^ "Area of regions (including lakes), km²". Regional Statistics Database. Turkish Statistical Institute. 2002. Retrieved 2013-03-05.
  2. ^ "Ağar'ın Bucak sevgisi". Sabah (in Turkish). 2006-09-04. Retrieved 2008-10-10. [dead link]
  3. ^ "Ayın Tarihi". Byegm.gov.tr. June 1980. Retrieved 2008-10-10.
  4. ^ "FP Davası Esas Hakkında Görüş" (in Turkish). Belgenet.com. Retrieved 2008-10-10.