One of the military vehicles destroyed by the PKK roadside bomb at
Photo: AFP/Getty
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NEWS/TURKEY
A series of deadly attacks has rocked eastern Turkey , claiming the lives of sixteen soldiers
and fourteen police officers in two days.
On Sunday night, PKK militants set up an armed
ambush by the village of Dağlıca in Hakkâri province, located near the border
with Iraq .
Bombs were remotely detonated just as two military vehicles passed by.
Earlier today, fourteen police officers were
killed by another roadside bomb laid in Iğdır, close to
the Armenian border. The attack targeted
a minibus carrying officers to the border gate.
Tuesday was marked by further fatalities in
eastern Turkey , a predominantly Kurdish area. This morning PKK militants opened fire
on a police officer’s car in Tunceli, killing the officer and wounding his
daughter.
Also today, a police officer whose vehicle was
attacked in another roadside bombing in Mardin succumbed to his injuries. Three
other officers in the car were seriously injured.
On Sunday, two police officers were killed and three
others wounded in Diyarbakır .
Members of the YDG-H (the youth wing of the PKK) used rocket-propelled
grenades to attack the police who were trying to cover the trenches dug by the
militants.
Fatalities top 100 since
ceasefire collapsed in July
More than 100 people, mostly security personnel,
have been killed in Turkey
since the government’s three-year ceasefire with the PKK collapsed during the
summer.
Former Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan had
been widely praised for seeking a permanent peace deal with the outlawed PKK
and his team had conducted talks with its jailed leader Abdullah Öcalan. Each
side blames the other for the end of the ceasefire, with government rhetoric hardening in recent weeks.
Following Sunday’s Dağlıca attack, Turkish Prime Minister
Ahmet Davutoğlu vowed that Turkish forces would eradicate the PKK. “The mountains, plains, plateaux and cities
of this country will not be abandoned to the terrorists. They will be cleansed;
whatever happens, they will be cleansed.”
Ahmet Davutoğlu vows to wipe out the PKK |
Turkish air raids
against PKK positions
Since the resumption of violence by the PKK in
mid-July, the Turkish government has mounted a series of air raids bombing suspected
PKK bases in northern Iraq ,
killing hundreds of militants in the process.
On Monday night, dozens of F-16 and F-4 jets took
part in one operation that lasted six hours, targeting PKK bases in
Qandil, Basyan Avashin and Zap, hitting the PKK’s weapons and food supplies, as
well as its machinegun positions.
Curfews imposed in
eastern Turkey
The authorities have also imposed curfews in
numerous towns and cities in the east of the country to try to prevent clashes
between the predominantly Kurdish locals and state forces.
At the weekend, the Turkish army stormed Cizre, a
city located in Şırnak province, to forcibly remove barriers the PKK had
erected. Two children were reportedly killed in the crossfire between troops
and militants. A curfew was imposed, and telephone and the internet cut. MPs
from the pro-Kurdish Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP) complained that the
authorities prevented them from entering the city to check on the welfare of locals
and to try and mediate a ceasefire.
With the casualties and tensions rising, earlier
today HDP co-chairman Selahattin Demirtaş again repeated his call for both
sides to lay down their arms. He also accused the AKP-led government of
pursuing deliberately confrontational policies. His opponents claim the HDP
remains allied to the PKK, with Demirtaş and his colleagues yet to openly
condemn the insurgents’ attacks as “terrorism”.
The PKK, which launched its bloody campaign for a
separate Kurdistan in 1984, is designated a terrorist organisation by Turkey , the European Union and United States . The conflict has
claimed over 40,000 lives to date.
Tensions rise
The PKK attacks have fermented nationalist anger
against Turkey ’s
Kurdish population, encouraged by the inflammatory comments of right-wing politicians
and pro-government media.
The Istanbul
branch of the HDP said on Twitter that 126 of the party's buildings around the
country were attacked on Monday. Earlier today, its Ankara office was pelted with rocks, while
protestors tried to storm its Kırşehir bureau. Its HDP flag was replaced with
the MHP flag, whose supporters then set fire to neighbouring shops owned by
Kurds.
There have also been several reports of Kurds being lynched across the country, including one man who was attacked for posting a picture on Facebook of him proudly wearing the uniform of the Kurdistan Regional Authority military. According to a news report in Hurriyet Daily News, nationalists tracked him down, beat him, ripped off his clothes and made him kiss a statue of Atatürk.
After attacking the HDP Kırşehir office, ultranationalists
set the neighbouring Kurdish bookshop on fire. Twitter/@DemGencF
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