Iraqi Kurds Urge PKK To Withdraw


(MENAFN- Arab Times) Turkey has killed 260 Kurdish militants in a week-long air offensive on targets in northern Iraq, official media claimed Saturday, as regional Iraqi authorities said it was time the rebels pulled out with concerns growing over civilian casualties. Ankara has launched a two-pronged "antiterror" offensive against Islamic State (IS) jihadists in Syria and Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) militants based in northern Iraq after a wave of attacks inside Turkey.
But so far the bombardments have focused far more on the Kurdish rebels and a report by the official Anatolia news agency of 260 alleged PKK militants killed was the first concrete indication of the scale of the casualties. Turkish F-16 jets carried out more air strikes Saturday morning, NTV television said. On Friday, 28 Turkish F-16s destroyed 65 targets of the PKK including shelters and arms depots, following the heaviest air strikes the day before when 80 Turkish aircraft hit 100 PKK targets, Anatolia said.

"For the peace and security of our people, the fight against terror organisations will continue without interruption," the office of Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said in a statement. The PKK's insurgency for greater rights and powers for Turkey's Kurdish minority, begun more than 30 years ago, has left tens of thousands dead. A ceasefire declared in 2013 has been shattered by the current violence.

Turkey's Kurdish militants have sought cover in neighbouring northern Iraq where the presence of the PKK has long been tolerated in Iraqi Kurdish-ruled region. More fighters also crossed into the area from Turkey as part of the 2013 ceasefire. Yet the PKK's relations with the autonomous Iraqi Kurdish authorities in Arbil have been beset by tensions, while Iraqi Kurds have expanded economic cooperation and relations with Turkey.

The office of the region's president Massud Barzani said in a statement Saturday that the PKK rebels should move out of the region to prevent civilian casualties. "The PKK must keep the battlefield away from the Kurdistan region in order for civilians not to become victims of this war," it said. The Kurdistan Regional government issued a slightly softer statement urging the PKK to keep its "forces" away from populated areas." Iraqi Kurdish officials said Saturday six people had been killed in a pre-dawn strike by Turkish war planes on the village of Zarkel and there have been reports of civilian casualties.

The pro-PKK Firat news agency described the attack as a "massacre" which had left at least nine civilians dead. There was no comment from the Turkish military. Kifah Mahmud, a Barzani adviser, told AFP that "if the PKK did not have bases inside the region, Turkey would not be bombing civilians." Without citing its sources, Anatolia said that among those wounded in the northern Iraq strikes was Nurettin Demirtas, the brother of the leader of the pro-Kurdish Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP), Selahattin Demirtas. "Up until now 260 terrorists have been rendered ineffective (killed) and 380-400 terrorists have been identified as injured," Anatolia said.

Demirtas openly acknowledges that his elder brother Nurettin had gone to the Kandil Mountain in northern Iraq where the PKK's military headquarters are based. But he said Sunday he could not confirm the Anatolia report as Nurettin had moved on. He is "resisting IS on behalf of the people," said Demirtas, without giving further details. The Turkish authorities have also been upping the pressure on the HDP with prosecutors opening criminal investigations against both its co-leaders. The HDP has angrily claimed that the current security crisis was provoked by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan to call snap elections and avenge the ruling party's disappointing performance in June 7 polls. Demirtas said Sunday that a legal advisor to Erdogan, Burhan Kuzu, was planning to close the party possibly "by the end of the year".

"We will stop this fascist approach," he said. Meanwhile, Kurdish militia fighting Islamic State in Syria accused Turkey on Saturday of targeting it at least four times in the past week, calling the attacks provocative and hostile. Turkey began a campaign of air strikes on Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) camps in northern Iraq and Islamic State fighters in Syria last Friday, in what Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu has called a "synchronised fight against terror". The campaign has raised suspicions among Kurds that Ankara's real agenda is checking Kurdish territorial ambitions rather than fighting Islamic State. The president of Iraq's Kurdistan region on Saturday condemned Turkey's bombardment of a village there which he said had killed civilians, and called for a return to the peace process between Ankara and the PKK.

Ankara said it would investigate. The Syrian Kurdish YPG said in a statement on its website that it came under cross-border fire on four occasions in the past week and described sightings of Turkish jets over northern Syria. The militia, which regularly coordinates with US-led air forces bombing Islamic State, said it had nothing to do with conflict between the PKK and Turkey. "We consider recent movements of the Turkish military as provocative and hostile actions," the statement said. "We ask our partners in the US-led international coalition against ISIS to clarify their approach towards these actions of the Turkish military."

Turkey made a turnaround last week by granting US-led forces fighting Islamic State access to its air bases. Pentagon spokeswoman Laura Seal said they had seen reports of the attacks on the YPG.


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