Background
She was born in Hakkâri Province in 1967, and she grew up and went to school there. One year later, Pervin’s first child, Necirvan, was born.
She was born in Hakkâri Province in 1967, and she grew up and went to school there. One year later, Pervin’s first child, Necirvan, was born.
She graduated from high school and started work as an official in the local government administration department.
She is President of Yakay-Der. She is one of the deputy speakers in the 26th Parliament of Turkey. The couple moved to Istanbul in 1990, where Pervin Buldan was a full-time housewife.
There, Savaş Buldan became a businessman, and he was claimed to be a drug dealer and PKK financier by the National Intelligence Organization of the Turkish government.
In 1993, their life changed when Prime Minister Tansu Çiller made a speech declaring that the government had a list of businessmen supporting the Kurdistan Workers" Party (PKK) whom they would hold accountable. After that speech, Savas received a series of threatening telephone calls.
The period of “killings by unidentified murderers” against businessmen, including Savaş Buldan, began. The next day their bodies were found in Bolu, at the edge of the river Melen.
They carried scars of heavy torture and had been shot in the head
In 2001 she founded Yakay-Der, the Association of Solidarity and Assistance for the Families of Missing Persons, to help the families of missing persons in Turkey, of which she is now president Before this she worked for Magazine-Der, an association with similar objectives which was closed down by the Turkish authorities because of alleged irregularities with respect to the Turkish Law of Associations. Yakay-Der grew out of the experience of the ‘Saturday Mothers’, who used civil disobedience to gain publicity and bring attention to the ‘disappearances in custody’ cases.
These cases became known to the public in Turkey as well as to the world at large.
Buldan has described how every week they would hold sit-down demonstrations at Galatasaray Place to ‘ask for the people that have disappeared’, to the state to talk about the ‘reality of the disappeared. In July 2007, Buldan stood as an independent candidate in the Turkish parliamentary elections and entered the Turkish Parliament.
She is an Member of Parliament for Iğdır. She was re-elected for a second term in the 12 June 2011 general election.
In 2008 an investigation was opened against her for a speech that she made during the Newroz celebrations in Iğdır.
In April 2010 she headed a group of MPs who demanded an investigation into the Armenian nuclear power plant at Metsamor, near the Turkish border. In 2013 she paid several visits to Ocalan on Imrali Island as deputy chair of the Peace and Democracy Party (BDP).
She was a member of the Democratic Society Party (DTP) in Iğdır, Eastern Turkey.