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Turkish Artillery Opens Fire on Kurdish Border Villages

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  • Turkish Artillery Opens Fire on Kurdish Border Villages

    eFluxMedia
    Oct 14 2007

    Turkish Artillery Opens Fire on Kurdish Border Villages

    by Diane Smith 13:16, October 14th 2007


    After the US congressional committee cataloged the First World War
    massacre of Armenians in what was then the Ottoman Empire as
    genocide, there wasn't sure how much influence the top US envoys sent
    on Saturday would have on Ankara. Their mission, besides talking
    about the genocide resolution, was to convince the Turkish
    authorities to reconsider their plans of a military incursion in the
    autonomous Kurdish region of northern Iraq.

    However, over night, the Turkish army hit the villages close to its
    country's border with Iraq using heavy artillery. If the abandoning
    of the next month's visit to the US by the Turkish Trade Minister
    Kursad Tuzman wasn't convincing enough, the shelling of the villages
    suspected of sheltering the members of the Kurdish Workers' Party
    (PKK) rebel group surely showed how dissatisfied Ankara is about the
    Wednesday resolution passed by the US congressional committee, in
    which the mass killings of Armenian people during the First World War
    were labeled as genocide.

    There were no human losses reported in last night's offensive which
    targeted the Nasdour area, a part of the mountainous Matin region,
    the witnesses cited by independent news agency Voices of Iraq (VOI)
    said.

    The killing of at least two dozens Turkish soldiers and civilians
    after rebel Kurdish Workers Party (PKK) attacks, were accompanied by
    public outrage that increased the pressure on the Turkish government
    to launch a military operation against the PKK camps.

    After Turkey announced its intentions of launching a military
    incursion into northern Iraq in order to destroy PKK camps, Kurdish
    authorities slammed the caveat and with it a security agreement that
    Baghdad's government sealed last month with Ankara.

    On Saturday, Kurdish lawmaker Mahmoud Othman urged Baghdad to cancel
    the security agreement. Othman said the Kurdistani Alliance, which
    has 53 seats in Iraq's Council of Representatives, will request a
    meeting with Interior Minister Jawad al-Bolani after the Muslim
    festival of Eid al-Fitr in order to talk about the security agreement
    he signed with Ankara.

    However, the Interior Ministry spokesman Abdel-Karim Khalaf answered
    that the Iraqi central government "is alone responsible for signing
    foreign agreements," thus it doesn't need to consult with `regional
    administrations.'

    "The centralized government is solely responsible for protecting the
    international Iraqi borders. The regional government is part of the
    state, and so they should not be concerned with foreign pacts,"
    Khalaf told VOI.

    The above mentioned security agreement was signed on September 28 by
    Baghdad and Ankara and it stipulates that Iraq will cooperate with
    Turkish authorities in hunting down PKK rebels close to its borders.

    After some reports Iraq agreed to cooperate, but refused to grant an
    absolute right to Turkish troops to cross the border in order to
    annihilate the PKK camps. Other accounts said that Turkey was given
    the right to chase the rebels, although the Iraqi government
    officials strongly denied such a thing.

    Despite the statement issued by government spokesman Ali al-Dabagh
    which said that Iraq would never allow Turkish troops into its
    territories, Turkey was already massing troops along the Iraqi border
    on Saturday.

    "Any Turkish attacks will be met with wide resistance from the
    (Kurdish) Peshmerga and the people," Kurdish government leader Qader
    Aziz said before the shelling.

    But a unilateral Kurdish response is doubtful, especially after
    Othman said on Saturday that a reaction to any Turkish incursion
    would by coordinated with the central government as well as the US
    forces in Iraq.

    The PKK, on the other hand, said on Saturday they do not intend to
    leave the region if the Turks attack and also that their members do
    not launch any military strikes from that region.

    "We have militants in Turkey who carry out the attacks. This is not
    new to Turks," Abdel-Rahman Chaderchi, who is in charge of the PKK's
    foreign relations, told VOI.

    He also added that Turkey hides behind the alleged hunt for PKK
    rebels its real intentions of eroding the rights of the Iraqi Kurds
    in the region


    http://www.efluxmedia.com/news_Turkish_Ar tillery_Opens_Fire_on_Kurdish_Border_Villages_0959 4.html
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