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Turkey Warns It Doesn't Need OK To Attack Kurds

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  • Turkey Warns It Doesn't Need OK To Attack Kurds

    TURKEY WARNS IT DOESN'T NEED OK TO ATTACK KURDS
    Joshua Partlow and Molly Moore, The Washington Post; with files from Agence France-Presse

    Ottawa Citizen
    Oct 26 2007
    Canada

    Continues to shell PKK to combat guerrilla violence

    BAGHDAD - The Turkish military said it continued attacks yesterday
    against Kurdish separatists in mountainous areas along the
    Turkish-Iraqi border, as officials of the two countries and the
    U.S. gathered to attempt to diffuse the crisis. Turkish Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan reiterated yesterday that his government does not
    have "to seek anyone's permission" to launch cross-border operations
    into Turkey and criticized allies for refusing to do more to curb
    the activities of the separatists. "The ball is in our court now
    and we will have to do what is necessary on our own if those who
    have the responsibility do not take action," Mr. Erdogan said in
    Bucharest during a joint news conference with Romanian Prime Minister
    Calin Popescu Tariceanu. Turkey has recently dispatched warplanes
    and helicopters to its southern border with Iraq and shelled the
    mountainous terrain in a growing effort to combat guerrillas from
    the Kurdistan Workers' Party, or PKK, who have killed more than 40
    Turkish soldiers, police and civilians in the past month and claim
    to have taken eight soldiers hostage in an ambush earlier this week.

    Turkey has threatened to invade Iraq to pursue the rebels, but
    U.S. and Iraqi diplomats are working to prevent that outcome. An Iraqi
    delegation led by Defence Minister Abdul-Qader al-Obeidi arrived in
    Ankara, the Turkish capital, for meeting with senior Turkish officials
    to discuss the increasing tension, skirmishes and attacks along the
    border. Turkish Foreign Minister Ali Babacan said Turkey is "expecting
    them to come with concrete proposals, "otherwise, the visit will have
    no meaning." "The political choice will be the first solution to solve
    the crisis," Yassin Majid, a member of the Iraq delegation and an
    adviser to Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki told reporters. "The
    Iraqi government insists on dialogue and co-operation to solve the
    crisis." The officials will conduct formal talks today. Mr. Erdogan
    criticized Turkey's European allies for failing "a sincerity test"
    in helping his country fight PKK activities. "Unfortunately, the
    terrorist organization has been establishing associations in several
    European countries, receiving financial support and our European
    friends are employing delaying tactics by refusing to hand over the
    PKK operatives they captured to Turkey," Mr. Erdogan said. Meanwhile
    in Washington, backers of a bill in Congress labelling massacres of
    Armenians as "genocide" yesterday bowed to White House pressure and
    agreed to delay the measure, which had sparked fury in Turkey. Four
    key sponsors of the bill, censuring the Ottoman Empire for the First
    World War killings, asked House of Representatives speaker Nancy
    Pelosi not to hold a debate on the issue.
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