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KurdistanObserver.com
Turkish Prime Minister
Angrily Denies Responsibility For Cold-Blooded Murder Of Kurdish Children
April 7, 2006/ AP &
AFP
DIYARBAKIR, (Northern
Kurdistan)— Turkey's leaders promised a tough fight against Kurdish militants
Turkish Prime Minister
Recep Tayyip Erdogan angrily rejected criticism Thursday that an excessive use
of force was to blame for the loss of life during Kurdish uprising last week.
The military meanwhile vowed to finish off the separatist Kurdistan Workers'
Party (PKK), whose rebels killed five soldiers and a policeman in the southeast
on Wednesday, after a week of urban violence in the region.
"Our security forces have displayed an attitude of tolerance unseen in other
countries, at the risk of being wounded or killed," Erdogan told reporters.
"No one can level such accusations against them and we will not bother to answer
them each and every time."
He was commenting on reports that a group of European Parliament members, in a
letter to Erdogan, condemned the authorities' response to the unrest and
threatened that Ankara's membership talks with the European Union might be
suspended if it fails to guarantee the rights of its Kurdish minority.
European Commission
demanded an investigation into ongoing violence that has left 16 dead after a
week of the worst street clashes in decades. Two EU legislators accused Turkey
of breaking international law by using pistol fire to disperse pro-Kurdish
demonstrators.
"Most recently, five
soldiers and a policeman were killed. Those who write such letters should first
come and experience what they (the security forces) have been going through,"
Erdogan said.
Foreign Minister Abdullah
Gul vowed Thursday that Turkey was determined to fight rebels without
sacrificing democratic reforms.
He promised a "sharper
struggle against terrorism" but said: "Turkey's democratic standards will
increase and strengthen; there will be no question of going back from democratic
steps taken."
Kurds have said the
government response to the demonstrations has been excessive and failed to deal
with the roots of the problem.
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
Erdogan has said the problems in Turkey's overwhelmingly Kurdish southeast would
be solved through democracy, but he has refused to meet with the leading
pro-Kurdish party, the Democratic Society Party.
Kurdish politicians say
that Erdogan's government met with leaders of Hamas, the Palestinian group that
is on many countries' lists of terrorist organizations, and should be willing to
meet with the pro-Kurdish party, which swept local elections in much of the
southeast.
A court in southeast Turkey
on Thursday ordered the arrests of four Kurdish politicians from the Democratic
Society Party suspected of taking part in the funerals of 14 Kurdish rebels last
week. The funerals were the spark for the uprising.
The arrests came amid
continued violence across the country. A Kurdish militant group on Wednesday
claimed responsibility for the bombing of an Istanbul office of Erdogan's party
that wounded two party workers. Separately, officials in the southeast on
Wednesday reported the deaths of six more security officers.
The Democratic Society
Party called in a statement for greater cultural and linguistic rights for
Kurds, as well as a general amnesty for the rebels.
The government often
accuses the Democratic Society Party of links to the Kurdistan Workers' Party,
or PKK.
A violent offshoot of the
PKK, the Kurdistan Freedom Falcons, has promised more bombings in response to
the unrest and has claimed responsibility for two bombings since Friday. |