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Turkish Military Confirms Eight Soldiers Missing

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  • Turkish Military Confirms Eight Soldiers Missing

    TURKISH MILITARY CONFIRMS EIGHT SOLDIERS MISSING
    Author : DPA

    Earthtimes, UK
    Oct 22 2007

    Ankara - The Turkish military on Monday afternoon confirmed that
    eight of its soldiers were missing following fighting with Kurdish
    rebels on Sunday and Monday that has left 12 soldiers and 34 Kurdish
    Workers' Party (PKK) guerrillas dead. In a short statement made on
    its website, the General Staff confirmed that eight soldiers were
    unaccounted for. The statement did not refer to PKK claims that the
    eight soldiers had been taken hostage.

    In the early hours of Sunday morning PKK guerrillas staged an ambush
    near the village of Daglica in Hakkari province. The military said
    that a group of around 150 rebels had crossed into Turkey from Iraq
    and were attempting to return to bases in northern Iraq.

    On Monday, Turkish media reported that Turkish forces, backed up by
    helicopter gunships were attempting to stop the rebels from slipping
    back into Iraq.

    Turkish government and military leaders on Sunday evening said they
    would do whatever is necessary to stop PKK attacks, including a
    possible cross-border operation to destroy PKK bases.

    "We respect Iraq's territorial integrity but Turkey will not tolerate
    terrorism ... and will not be afraid to pay whatever price to protect
    its rights," said a statement issued after the meeting.

    Last week the parliament voted overwhelmingly to authorize the
    government to order a cross-border operation but Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan has so far indicated that he is not in favour of an
    immediate incursion.

    According to the Turkish military, there are around 3,500 PKK
    guerrillas based in mountainous northern Iraq.

    More than 32,000 people have been killed since the PKK launched its
    fight for independence or autonomy for the mainly Kurdish- populated
    south-east.

    Despite the PKK being listed as a terrorist group by the US State
    Department, Washington is opposed to Turkey launching a cross-border
    operation due to fears that such an incursion could spark unrest and
    fighting in Kurdish-controlled northern Iraq, the one area of Iraq
    which is relatively calm.

    Exactly how much leverage the US has over Turkey at the moment is
    unclear as Turkey is extremely angry that a US congressional committee
    resolution that passed last week labelled the World War I massacres
    of Armenians in what was then the Ottoman Empire as a genocide.

    Turkey denies that the killings constitute a genocide and that instead
    the deaths came about because of an uprising of Armenians against
    the state.
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