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  • PKK: Fighters moving back to Turkey

    Aljazeera.net, Qatar
    Oct 12 2007


    PKK: Fighters moving back to Turkey



    The Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) has said its fighters are moving
    from northern Iraq back into southern Turkey where they intend to
    target the country's politicians.

    The announcement comes as the Turkish government prepares to seek
    permission from parliament to carry out a cross-border offensive
    against the PKK.


    The rebel group fighting for an independent homeland in southeastern
    Turkey, issued a statement on Friday that could place more pressure
    on Ankara to be seen to be taking action against the group.

    "The source of this war is in north Kurdistan [eastern Turkey] ...
    the guerrillas are not moving to the south [northern Iraq], on the
    contrary they are moving to ... places in the north," the statement
    said.

    "The guerrillas are positioning themselves against the attacks of the
    Turkish state."

    "AKP [the ruling party] and CHP [opposition party] organisations in
    the region are among our targets", it said.

    Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the Turkish prime minister, earlier said he is
    ready to face international criticism should his country decide to
    attack suspected Kurdish rebel bases in northern Iraq.

    Paying the price

    Asked about world reaction to a possible incursion, Erdogan said:
    "After going down this route, its cost has already been calculated.
    Whatever the cost is, it will be met."

    "When we make a decision, we take into account Turkey's interests."

    He also emphasised that Ankara had no territorial ambitions in Iraq.

    After a recent increase of attacks by Kurdish fighters on Turkish
    troops, Erdogan's government has decided to seek approval from
    parliament next week for a major military operation to target members
    of the PKK, who use northern Iraq as a base to attack Turkish
    targets.

    Erdogan said he wanted to secure parliament's approval now to avoid
    spending time later with the procedure if, and when, a cross-border
    operation was warranted.

    Warnings

    Over the past few days the has sought to calm tensions with Turkey,
    after a vote on Wednesday in which the US House of Representatives
    foreign affairs committee branded the killings of Armenians by
    Ottoman Turks during World War One as genocide - a charge Turkey has
    firmly denied.

    The US has also urged Ankara not to take unilateral action against
    the PKK.

    The European Union, which Turkey wants to join, have also cautioned
    against such moves.

    Meanwhile, analysts predict that an operation is more likely after
    the US congressional committee's decision.

    The PKK is considered a terrorist group by Turkey, the US and the EU.

    More than 37,000 people have been killed since the group began
    fighting for a homeland in 1984.

    Turkey and Iraq signed an accord last month to combat the PKK, but
    failed to agree on a clause allowing Turkish troops to engage in "hot
    pursuit" against rebels fleeing into Iraqi territory, as they did
    regularly in the 1990s.

    Ankara claims the PKK has used bases in northern Iraq to launch a
    renewed offensive inside Turkey that killed 15 soldiers last week.


    http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/E6C3560F -A490-4474-B236-11D323A0C64A.htm
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