Kurdish rebels launch attack on targets in Turkey
The attack comes amid renewed conflict between the security forces and insurgents that has wrecked a fragile peace process.
Violence has sharply increased in Turkey in the past week, with the government launching aerial strikes against Kurdistan Workers’ Party, or PKK, bases in northern Iraq, and the rebels escalating attacks against Turkey’s security forces. Some 20 people, most of them soldiers, have died in the renewed violence.
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Hide AdPKK militants raided the police station in the town of Pozanti, in southern Adana province, on Thursday, killing two policemen and sparking a gunfight that also killed two rebels, said governor Mustafa Buyuk. He said the rebels were armed with automatic rifles and hand grenades.
In the eastern province of Kars, the rebels detonated a bomb they placed on rail tracks and later fired on rail workers who were sent to repair the line, the region’s deputy governor, Adem Unal, told the state-run Anadolu Agency. One of the workers was killed.
Turkey last week conducted air assaults on Islamic State group targets and also opened its air bases for sorties by the US-led coalition fighting the group. The decision came after a suicide bombing blamed on IS killed 32 people and militants fired on Turkish troops, killing a soldier.
But Turkey shifted focus to the PKK following an attack claimed by the rebels that killed two policemen. That is complicating the US war on IS militants, which has relied heavily on Syrian Kurdish fighters affiliated with Turkey’s Kurdish rebels.
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Hide AdTurkish prime minister Ahmet Davutoglu has said Turkey’s onslaught against the PKK will continue until its fighters lay down arms, despite calls from Turkey’s main pro-Kurdish political party for the resumption of peace efforts. On Thursday, Davutoglu vowed renewed strikes against IS militants if the group attacks Turkish targets again.
“A single shot fired at our soldiers will result in the destruction of all those who fired the shot, until no one dares again to conduct such a thing at our border,” Mr Davutoglu said. “These operations will continue until all arms are laid down and armed (fighters) leave the country, and until (IS) stops being a threat.”
The Kurdish party’s co-chairman renewed his plea for peace yesterday, as Turkey began holding funerals for the two officers killed in the police station attack and three soldiers slain in southeast Turkey on Thursday.
“The dialogue – slow as it was – must resume,” Selahattin Demirtas said in televised comments.