UPDATED ON:
Monday, October 06, 2008
00:03 Mecca time, 21:03 GMT
 
News Europe
Turkey bombs PKK bases in Iraq

Thousands gathered across Turkey for the funeral of the slain soldiers [AFP]

Turkish warplanes have bombed bases belonging to the Kurdistan Worker's Party (PKK) in northern Iraq, the military has said.

The raids late on Saturday came after PKK fighters killed 15 Turkish soldiers in an attack staged partly from Iraqi soil.

According to a military statement released on Sunday, the planes bombed PKK bases in the Avasin Basyan region in Iraq.

Thousands of people gathered across Turkey for the funerals of the soldiers killed in Friday's attack.

Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the prime minister, attended a funeral in Armutlu, a village near the capital Ankara for one of the slain soldiers.

An estimated 2,000 people also attended the funeral, where mourners shouted anti-PKK solgans and demanded the execution of Abdullah Ocalan, the group's leader, who has been serving a life sentence since 1999.

Anger has also been mounting at the Turkish government. Mourners booed Abdullah Gul, the president, at a funeral in the western city of Eskisehir.

Many of those present demanded tougher action on the part of the government to crack down on the PKK.

"If there is a government, it should show itself," said Molla Atagur, a 68-year-old resident in Armutlu.

Iraqi 'support'

Many are urging the government for a tougher approach towards the PKK [AFP]
General Hasan Igsiz, the Turkish military chief, has accused leaders in northern Iraq of tolerating PKK fighters

"We don't receive any kind of support from the local administration in the northern part of Iraq," he said.

"Our expectation from them is to accept that the terrorist organisation is a terrorist organisation and eliminate the support provided to it."

The Turkish government is urging Iraqi Kurdish leaders to arrest the fighters and cut their supply lines.

Friday's attack touched off the deadliest battle between Turkish troops and Kurdish fighters in eight months. Fifteen soldiers and at least 23 fighters were killed, while another 20 soldiers were wounded and two were still missing, the military said.

"They did not die in vain, they did their duties and they succeeded," Igsiz said.

Igsiz also said northern Iraqi leaders should block the fighters from using local roads and hospitals.

Iraq's national government has pledged to cooperate with Turkey. Jalal Talabani , the president, who is also a Kurd, told Gul in a phone call on Saturday that he condemned Friday's attack.

 Source: Agencies
Feedback Number of comments : 3
 
Fouad
Netherlands
06/10/2008
Trukeys genocide
While Sadam was condemned and toppled for his attacks on the Kurds the Turkish state continues to commit genocide on a mass scale. There is no condemnation of Turkey, however, as Turkey is a 'key' allie and thus is exempt from all laws, treaties and everything else that governs the world (like the US). The hypocricy of it is sickening as even the genocide committed by Attaturk isn't even fully recognised by the so called 'enlightened' (US puppet) states.

Elizabeth
Turkey
06/10/2008
not a question of genocide
Turkey's reaction to the PKK, which is a terrorist organization that has targeted innocent humans by planting bombs at bus stations, outside schools, in neighborhood dumpsters, and in the metros in Istanbul, is a natural one. This is not a question of genocide, and Ataturk did not commit genocide against Kurds. Rather, he decreed that all people inside Turkey are TURKS. Period. What this conflict does stem from is Turkey's inability to provide education equally in all areas, especially the east.

Martin
United States
06/10/2008
Foolishness
Now that the PKK has foolishly chosen to make an enemy of the Turks, there will be nowhere to run to when the Iraqi government starts taking over the PKK oil production. They have doomed themselves. It's pathetic.

 
ARTICLE TOOLS
 Email Article  Email article
 Print Article  Print article
 Send Feedback  Send feedback
 Share article  Share article