KurdistanObserver.com
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Kurdish Nationalists in Iraq, Turkey Seek Land of Their Own |
By Simon
Marks
Diyarbakir, Turkey
27 March 2007 |
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As violent instability
convulses much of Iraq, the country's neighbors are keeping a watchful eye. In
recent weeks, Turkey has warned Kurds in northern Iraq not to make any moves to
declare themselves independent from Baghdad. Turkey has a large Kurdish
population of its own, and the government in Ankara is worried by the violence
in Iraq, fearing that it threatens the country's territorial integrity.
Correspondent Simon Marks traveled to the Turkish border with Iraq, and sends
this report.
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| Trucks lining up at
Turkish-Iraqi border |
You see the trucks long before you see Turkey's
border with Iraq. For several miles they line the roadside, loaded with steel,
cement and food.
It can take several days to secure permission
to cross into Iraqi territory. Yet every day 4,000 truckloads of Turkish goods
cross the border into northern Iraq and Iraqi oil crosses the border going out.
Many of these drivers are Turkish Kurds from
the southeast of the country, and they have a unique opportunity to see life on
both sides of the border. Some of them, like driver Ethem Ozer, believe that a
single independent Kurdish state would better support Kurdish families in both
Turkey and Iraq.
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| Turkish truck driver
Ethem Ozer |
"We want to unite,” he says. “Why do we want to
unite? There shouldn't be any problems between us. If there is no business
here, maybe they have some business, so we go and work there. And if there's no
work there, they could come and work here. We have rights, and so do they, and
that's why we want to unite."
But that kind of talk terrifies Turkey's
government. It vigorously opposes the idea of a Kurdish state based on Turkish
or Iraqi territory. Rebels trying to achieve that goal are now based in the
mountains of northern Iraq. The Turkish government says fighters with the
outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party -- the PKK – are being given safe haven in
U.S.-occupied Iraq, even though the U.S. government brands the PKK a terrorist
organization.
Abdullah Gul is Turkey's Foreign Minister. He
says, "We can't understand this, you see. If an enemy regime gives this
opportunity to them, we understand this, you see. That is an enemy regime, you
see. But this is a friendly country. The country we are helping. The country
that is controlled by our allies, and we are helping them. This is the problem,
you see?"
The U.S. government says it is taking action
against the PKK, in partnership with the Turkish government. But the U.S.
Ambassador to Turkey, Ross Wilson, concedes there are other problems in Iraq
that are taking precedence.
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| Ross Wilson, U.S.
Ambassador to Turkey |
"U.S. forces are rather busy. They face a
number of terrorist problems, a number of insurgent problems,” the ambassador
says. “They have focused their primary energies on those insurgent issues that
directly challenge the center of gravity in Baghdad and that challenge our
forces.”
In the ancient backstreets of Diyarbakir, the
largest Kurdish city in southeastern Turkey, the PKK does not appear to be
winning the battle for hearts and minds. This city was originally settled more
than 5,000 years ago.
Today it is home to Kurds who are struggling to
make a living, a fact that carpenter Sherif Uraki believes the PKK doesn't fully
understand. "What the PKK is doing, or what the government is doing is not
important to us. We are just trying to earn enough money to buy bread,” he
says. “And from the early hours of the morning we are working here. We are just
trying to take bread to our homes, and I don't think either the PKK or the
government has any idea of the conditions under which we are living. We're just
trying to survive."
Ongoing instability could lead the Turkish army
to take up positions on Iraqi territory in a bid to overcome the PKK.
Retired General Edit Baser is the Turkish
government's special representative on counterterrorism. "You cannot just sit
and watch when your neighbor's house is on fire, OK? You got to do something
about it,” he explains. “Because that fire may come into your house, your
yard. So you have to take some measures to avoid it, and to help your neighbor
if you can.”
The general and many politicians back in Ankara
fear Kurdish ambitions for a separate state making up northern Iraq and Kurdish
areas in Turkey. They have already fought a 20-year war against the PKK and seem
ready to fight another if necessary. The Kurds are caught in the middle and they
wonder whether events will bring them stability and opportunity, or yet more
uncertainty and distress.