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Dutch court to review case of Kurds detained at alleged rebel traini

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  • Dutch court to review case of Kurds detained at alleged rebel traini

    Dutch court to review case of Kurds detained at alleged rebel training camp
    by ANTHONY DEUTSCH; Associated Press Writer

    Associated Press Worldstream
    February 7, 2005 Monday

    ROTTERDAM, Netherlands -- A Dutch court was on Tuesday to review the
    cases of 16 Kurds detained last year in the Dutch countryside allegedly
    training to carry out terrorist attacks in Turkey and Armenia.

    The 16 defendants arrested in a November sweep were to be charged
    under tough new anti-terrorism laws that went into effect a few months
    before they were detained. Prosecutors say all are members of a rebel
    group known as the Kurdish Workers' Party, or PKK. They are accused
    of membership in a terrorist organization and passport forgery,
    among other charges.

    Charges against 22 others were dropped and they have been handed
    over to immigration authorities, prosecution spokeswoman Desiree
    Leppens said.

    The November raid was the largest single crackdown to date on suspected
    PKK members in the European Union. Members of the PKK met openly in
    the Netherlands throughout the 1990s, but the group was banned in
    Europe last year.

    More than 200 police were involved in the operation near the town of
    Boxtel in the southern Brabant province.

    Police seized night vision goggles, packages of clothing intended to
    be sent abroad, instructional materials, passports and identity cards,
    prosecutors said.

    Prosecutors say "more than 20 people were being trained for armed
    conflict ... including terrorist attacks" and that they were being
    prepped in special war tactics. Others allegedly arranged money
    transfers, passports and passed along information to foreign members.

    Prosecutors were expected to request more time to prepare their case
    at Tuesday's pretrial hearing.

    Fighting between Turkish troops and autonomy-seeking Kurds has killed
    some 37,000 people since rebels took up arms in 1984. The rebels
    are fighting to carve out an independent state in the mountainous
    southeast region of Turkey.

    Turkey has long demanded that European Union nations act against
    the rebel group, whose sympathizers run a satellite TV station in
    Denmark and allegedly collect hundreds of thousands of dollars a year
    in major European cities.

    In January, a Dutch court blocked the extradition of Kurdish rebel
    leader Nuriye Kesbir to Turkey, saying it feared she could be tortured
    if sent to a Turkish prison. Kesbir was accused of helping plan a
    series of bombings for the PKK in the 1990s.
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