Uras graduated from the Faculty of Economics of
Istanbul University and began working as an academician at the same institution. A former leader of the now-defunct University Lecturers' Union (
Öğretim Elemanları Sendikası), he was elected the chairman of
Freedom and Solidarity Party (ÖDP) in 1996. Uras resigned from the leadership after the
2002 general election. He became the party chairman again in 2007.
2007 elections and after Uras ran a successful campaign as an independent and a "common candidate of the Left" within the
Thousand Hopes alliance, backed by Kurdish-based
Democratic Society Party and several left-wing, environmentalist and pro-peace groups in the
2007 general election, polling 81,486 votes, which is approximately 4 per cent of the vote in his constituency. After having elected as an independent to the parliament he rejoined the ÖDP. After the Democratic Society Party was dissolved in December 2009 and two of its MPs were banned from politics for five years, he joined forces with the remaining Kurdish MPs in the
Peace and Democracy Party group, giving them the twenty seats necessary to retain their position as a parliamentary party.
Post-parliamentarian political life Uras did not run in the
2011 general election. On 25 November 2012, he became a co-founder and member of
Greens and the Left Party of the Future, founded as a merger of the
Greens and the
Equality and Democracy Party. The Greens and Left Party backed the Kurdish-led
Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP) in the 2015 elections. Uras called for the HDP to move closer to
Syriza as a political party model, with a more libertarian perspective. ==Personal life==