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Iraqi Kurds: No To Turkish Military Push

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  • Iraqi Kurds: No To Turkish Military Push

    IRAQI KURDS: NO TO TURKISH MILITARY PUSH
    By Yahya Barzanji

    The Associated Press
    Oct 18 2007

    IRBIL, Iraq (AP) - Thousands of Kurds joined rallies across northern
    Iraq and marched to U.N. offices Thursday to protest a vote by Turkey's
    lawmakers that backed possible cross-border attacks against Kurdish
    rebel camps.

    The Turkish vote Wednesday removed the last legal obstacle to an
    offensive to root out guerrillas seeking autonomy for the mostly
    Kurdish region of southeastern Turkey. But there no sign of imminent
    military strikes, and the United States and the Iraqi government have
    urged restraint.

    "No to military action. Yes to dialogue," demonstrators shouted
    as more than 5,000 people headed to U.N. offices in Dahuk near the
    Turkish border.

    Protesters delivered a document calling for U.N. intervention to stop
    any further incursions into Iraq by Turkey - which has sent troops
    across the border several times in past decades to chase the Kurdish
    Workers' Party, or PKK.

    In Irbil, the capital of Iraq's Kurdish region, children in school
    uniforms and other protesters waved banners in Kurdish and English:
    "Understanding each other is better than killing each other."

    The rallies also tapped into Kurdish solidarity for a people spread
    across several borders in the region, including Turkey, Iran, Iraq and
    Syria. Some protesters brandished the sunshine-crested flag of Iraq's
    autonomous Kurdish region and joined in pro-Kurdish slogans and songs.

    "We in our country have done nothing against neighboring Turkey and
    we will not allow that our dignity be violated," said Evan Dosky,
    a 26-year-old university student.

    Washington has urged its longtime ally Turkey to work with Iraqis to
    crack down on the rebels, fearing a unilateral offensive by Turks
    might bring chaos and a refugee crisis to one of the rare stable
    areas in Iraq. Oil prices, meanwhile, have spiked on worries that a
    Turkish drive could disrupt supplies.

    But Turkey, a NATO member, says it has the right to attack Kurdish
    rebels in Iraq in the name of fighting terrorism - drawing parallels
    to the U.S.-led campaigns in Afghanistan after the Sept. 11, 2001
    attacks. Washington lists the PKK as a terrorist organization.

    "Those who criticize us on the parliamentary motion should explain
    what they are doing in Afghanistan," said Turkey's justice minister,
    Mehmet Ali Sahin. "Turkey is implementing the same international rule."

    Turkish relations with Washington have been further strained by U.S
    congressional debate on whether to declare as a genocide the killing
    of up to 1.5 million Armenians by Turks during World War I. Turkey
    denies there was a systematic campaign to eliminate Armenians, saying
    the deaths came during the civil unrest that accompanied the collapse
    of the Ottoman Empire.

    The PKK has long maintained hideouts along the rugged Iraq-Turkey
    border during its 23-year separatist campaign, which has left an
    estimated 37,000 people dead.

    Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari, a Kurd, said the government
    was willing to increase pressure on the PKK, but it doesn't have the
    forces to push it out of the country.

    "The Iraqi government is not running away from its responsibilities.

    It's just a question of time," he told The Associated Press in a
    telephone interview.

    "You need to dislodge them by force," he said. "Iraqi security forces
    are battling the terrorists in the streets of Baghdad and many other
    key cities and are over-stretched. To release these forces really
    would create a vacuum."

    But, he said, Iraq could take steps to cut off supplies and create
    checkpoints to limit access for the rebels in the north. He also
    recommended three-party talks between Iraq, Turkey and the United
    States.

    "We would definitely consider a number of measures to take to disrupt
    PKK activities ... but we need to discuss these," he said. "We haven't
    seen that great enthusiasm from the Turkish side to engage seriously
    in a substantive dialogue."

    In Washington, Iraqi government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh chided Iraqi
    Kurds for not chasing the PKK out of their autonomous region. He said
    the "natural feeling" of the Iraqi Kurds is to "feel sympathy with
    their brothers in Turkey."

    "The Iraqi government is calling the Turkey government not to use the
    military solution and refrain from crossing the Iraqi border," he said.
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