Tülay Hatımoğulları Oruç | |
Office2: | Member of the Grand National Assembly of Turkey |
Termstart2: | 24 June 2018 |
Constituency2: | Adana (2018, 2023) |
Office3: | Co-Chair of the Socialist Refoundation Party |
Termstart3: | 2016 |
Alongside3: | Ahmet Kaya |
Birth Place: | Samandağ, Antakya, Turkey |
Alma Mater: | Anadolu University |
Termend3: | 2018 |
Party: | DEM Party |
Otherparty: | Socialist Refoundation Party Peoples' Democratic Party |
Office: | Co-Leader of the Peoples' Equality and Democracy Party (DEM Party) |
Termstart: | 13 October 2023 |
Alongside: | Tuncer Bakırhan |
Tülay Hatimoğulları Oruç (born 1977) is a Turkish linguistics rights activist and politician. She is the Co-Chair of the Peoples' Equality and Democracy Party and a member of the Grand National Assembly of Turkey.
Tülay Hatimoğulları Oruç was born in 1977 in Samandağ, Hatay in an Alawite family.[1] She studied economics at Anadolu University.[2]
Her adherence to political socialism defined itself during high school.[3] Tulay Hatımoğulları Oruç was elected Co-Chair of the SYKP in 2016.[4] In the parliamentary elections of June 2018 she was elected to the Grand National Assembly of Turkey representing the Adana Province for the Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP).[5] On the 17 March 2021, the Turkish state prosecutor before the Court of Cassation, Bekir Şahin filed a lawsuit at the Constitutional Court demanding for her and 686 other politicians a five-year ban for political activities.[6]
As the Co-Chair of the Religion and Faith Commission of the HDP,[7] she defends the protection of the cultural rights of the minorities in Turkey according to the Treaty of Lausanne from 1923.[8] She opposed the deployment of Turkish troops to Libya.[9] She is also on the view that Kurdistan exists, which in November 2021 prompted a trilateral discussion between her, fellow HDP Politician Garo Paylan, and the Turkish Defense Minister Hulusi Akar who denied the existence of a Kurdistan, be it in Turkey or Iraq.[10] When in May 2022 several performances of Kurdish artists were banned, she demanded an information whether there existed an order from the Turkish Government banning such performances.[11]
Oruç criticizes the contact ban imposed on Abdullah Öcalan, the leader of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), and calls for his release, and also identifies the "Kurdish problem" and the "Palestinian problem" as two significant challenges in the region that democratic confederalism can potentially resolve.[12]
She was raised in an Arab household and identifies as a feminist and an Alawite.