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KurdistanObserver.com
Iran Continues Shelling Southern Kurdistan Despite Protest
August 30, 2007
BAGHDAD, -- Iran has continued to fire shells into Kurdistan (northern Iraq)
despite protests from Baghdad, threatening relations between the two neighbors,
Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshiyar Zebari said on Thursday.
Iraqi Kurdish officials have complained about cross-border shelling since
mid-August. Cross-border skirmishes also occasionally occur as Iraq's neighbors
Turkey and Iran battle Kurdish separatist rebels operating from bases in Iraq's
mountainous northeastern region of Kurdistan.
"On the 28th of this month we summoned the Iranian ambassador and delivered a
memorandum about shelling across the Iraqi border. We called at that time for
Iran to immediately halt this operation because it is harming relations between
the two countries," Zebari told a news conference.
"According to information we have received, the shelling is continuing today in
Erbil (province). We again call on the Iranian government to immediately stop
this military operation."
Baghdad says hundreds of Kurds have had to be evacuated from border villages as
a result of Iranian shelling.
On Thursday about 1000 Kurds in Sulaimani protested the shelling, and called on
the Kurdish government to take extreme measures.
Kurdish PJAK guerrillas, who seek autonomy for Kurdish areas in Iran, are
believed to shelter in the Iraqi Kurdistan border area.
"We have said many times that we will not allow any group to operate from our
territory against neighboring countries. But such cases are to be dealt with by
discussion," Zebari said, adding that Baghdad was willing to discuss the issue
with Iran.
"Yes, there is a group that opposes the government of Iran, the PJAK, which
moves inside the Iraqi border. But this does not justify continuous daily
shelling," he said.
"We are not so weak that everyone can interfere and fire shells across our
border and we would not do anything about it."
Iran has yet to comment officially regarding the shelling.
Baghdad and Tehran also have a tense relationship over U.S. accusations that
Iran supports Shi'ite militants in Iraq with weapons and training, which Iran
denies.
Iraq has had similar disputes in the past with Turkey over Kurdish separatist
guerrillas hiding in its border region.
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