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Dutch Arrest Alleged Kurdish Rebels

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  • Dutch Arrest Alleged Kurdish Rebels

    Dutch Arrest Alleged Kurdish Rebels
    By TOBY STERLING

    AP Online
    Nov 13, 2004

    A nationwide anti-terrorism operation netted 38 suspected members of
    a Kurdish rebel group Friday, including "militant trainees" being
    prepared at a rural campground for fighting in Turkey and Armenia,
    officials said.

    The detainees are all alleged members of the former Kurdistan Workers'
    Party, or PKK, a rebel group which now calls itself KONGRA-GEL and is
    branded as terrorist by the United States and the European Union. The
    group seeks to carve out an independent Kurdish state in the mountains
    of Iran, Iraq, Syria and Turkey.

    More than 200 police were involved in the second major operation
    in the Netherlands in a week, after special forces used tear
    gas to end a standoff with alleged Islamic radicals in The Hague
    Wednesday. Prosecutors said the two operations were unrelated.

    Nine arrests were made Friday in raids in The Hague, Rotterdam,
    Eindhoven, Amsterdam's Schiphol airport, and the town of Capelle aan
    den Ijssel.

    Most of the arrests came in a sweep of an alleged paramilitary training
    camp near Boxtel. Police seized night vision goggles, packages of
    clothing intended to be sent abroad, instruction materials, passports
    and identity cards, prosecutors said.

    "More than 20 people were being trained for armed conflict
    ... including terrorist attacks" a statement by prosecutors
    said. "Trainees were taught special war tactics."

    There were also indications that "a number of the trainees were
    destined for Armenia," it said.

    Other detainees allegedly arranged money transfers, passports and
    passed along information to PKK members in Turkey and Armenia,
    prosecutors said.

    The detainees, whose names were not released, included 33 men and
    five women.

    Prosecution spokesman Wim de Bruin said the group had been under
    observation for several months and that "the course was nearly
    finished."

    "We wanted to prevent the group from leaving the country and putting
    to use the knowledge they had gained," he said.

    Boxtel's mayor, Jan van Homelen, said the suspects were PKK members.

    The PKK, which recently renamed itself KONGRA-GEL, ended a five-year
    unilateral cease-fire in June and has carried out a number of attacks
    recently, most in Turkey's predominantly Kurdish southeast.

    It has been on Europe's list of terrorist organizations since
    April. Dutch prosecutors said those arrested Friday will likely be
    charged as members.

    "Apparently there's been a training center there for a long time,
    and that's why it was decided to step in," Van Homelen said on
    national television.

    Van Homelen said as far as he knew, the suspects did not use weapons or
    explosives in their training, which he described as "more theoretical."

    Prosecutors said the suspects said they were Kurdish but were
    considered Turkish nationals by the Dutch state.

    On Monday, The Hague's district court blocked the extradition of
    alleged PKK leader Nuriye Kesbir to Turkey for her suspected role
    in a series of bombings in the 1990s. The Justice Ministry said it
    would appeal the decision.
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