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Turkish
planes bomb PKK targets in Iraq
Middle east desk Report
ANKARA (Turkey)—Turkish jet fighters bombed Kurdish rebel targets in
northern Iraq early Sunday, Turkey’s military said, marking an
escalation of force against the outlawed separatist group. An Iraqi
official said the planes attacked several villages, killing one woman.
The nighttime offensive was the first confirmed time since the U.S.-led
invasion that Turkish war planes have been used in Iraqi territory.
Turkey has previously attacked the area with ground-based artillery and
helicopters.
The fighter jets hit rebel positions close to the border with Turkey and
the Qandil mountain, which straddles the Iraq-Iran border and is 60
miles from the frontier between Iraq and Turkey, the military said in a
statement posted on its Web site. It said the operation was directed
against the rebels and not against the local population.
The leadership council of the Kurdistan Workers Party, or PKK, is based
on Qandil and the group has a network of camps around the mountain. The
group seeks autonomy for the Kurdish minority in southeastern Turkey and
has hideouts in northern Iraq
Abdullah Ibrahim, a top local official in the Iraqi administrative
center of Sangasar, said Turkish warplanes bombarded 10 Kurdish
villages, killing one woman and injuring two others. He acknowledged
that there were Kurdish rebel bases in the area, but said they were far
from the villages that were hit.
“The villagers are now scared and are hiding in nearby caves. They lost
all their properties,” Ibrahim said. Villages are scattered in the
Qandil mountains, some as far as an hour’s drive apart over steep roads
and paths. The region that was attacked was about 105 miles from the
Turkish border.
Jamal Abdullah, a spokesman for the regional government of Iraqi
Kurdistan, told AP Television News: “We call on the Turkish army to
differentiate between the PKK and the ordinary people. We don’t want the
conflict between the Turkish troops and the PKK to turn into a conflict
between the Turkish forces and the people of Kurdistan.”
Turkey’s NTV television claimed that one of the targets hit was a PKK
“command center” in northern Iraq. However, news reports in the past
weeks have suggested that PKK fighters may have dispersed from camps in
northern Iraq, worried about a possible attack from Turkey.
The attack came a month after the United States promised to share
intelligence with Turkey about the PKK. The United States and Iraq have
urged Turkey to avoid a major operation against rebel bases in northern
Iraq, fearing such an operation would destabilize what has been the
calmest region in the country.
Turkish forces have periodically shelled across the Iraqi border, and
have sometimes carried out “hot pursuits” — limited raids on the Iraqi
side that sometimes last only a few hours.
In a Nov. 5 meeting with Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan,
President Bush declared the PKK a “common enemy” and promised to share
intelligence on the group. “This operation, which was carried out under
night conditions, was a success,” Erdogan said Sunday. “Our struggle
(against the PKK) will continue inside and outside Turkey with the same
determination.”
The military said the air strikes began at 1 a.m., with all planes
returning to their bases safely by around 4:15 a.m. The army then
continued firing on the targets with long-range weapons, the military
said. Artillery units fired shells toward Iraq from the town of Cukurca,
where the borders of Turkey, Iran and Iraq meet, footage from the
private Dogan news agency showed.
Private NTV television said some 50 warplanes were involved in the
airstrikes. Deputy Prime Minister Cemil Cicek urged Kurdish separatists
to surrender and said Turkey would press ahead with operations against
rebel bases in northern Iraq “with determination when necessary.”
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