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Kurds
aiming for final agreement next week
Ecevit
says Turkey prepares its defenses
Trouble
brews between Kurds/Islamic rebels in Iraq
KDP
and PUK Set to Seal Agreement on Implementing Four-Year-Old Peace Deal
Kurds
tell of Iraqi war ignored by outside world
Iraq's
Kurds Fear Results of U.S. Attack on Saddam
Former
US diplomat visits Iraqi Kurdistan
Turkey's
Kurdish party sees no ban before polls
Al-Qaeda
Surrogate Islamic Group in Southern Kurdistan Destroys Sufi Shrines
Two
Kurdish guerrillas killed in Southern Kurdistan
Police
Smash Immigrant Smuggling Ring
Washington
will not lay the groundwork for a "provisional government"
Iraqi
Kurds Fear Islamic Militant Group
Attack
by Islamist Radicals in Kurdistan Brings Kurdish Factions Closer
Sweden
Arrests Kurd in Immigrant "Honor Killing"
Turkey
set for November polls, EU reforms in doubt
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Turkey, Iraqi Kurdish Tensions High
Aug 23, 2002
ANKARA, Turkey (AP) - Talk of a possible U.S. attack on Iraq is
exacerbating tensions between Turkey and an Iraqi Kurdish faction - two
crucial allies if the United States takes military action against Saddam
Hussein's regime.
Turkey is worried that the Iraqi Kurds, who run an autonomous zone in
northern Iraq, would try to carve out their own state if Saddam is
overthrown. Turkish officials fear that would encourage Kurdish separatist
movements in Turkey.
The tensions could complicate Washington's efforts to build an
anti-Saddam coalition because Turkey is home to a key air base that U.S.
warplanes use to patrol a no-fly zone over northern Iraq. Washington is also apparently interested in using former Iraqi air bases in the Kurdish
enclave.
Turkey fought Kurdish guerrillas for 15 years in the southeast of the
nation, which borders northern Iraq, and says that a Kurdish state would
serve as an inspiration for the rebels.
The Iraqi Kurds fear Turkish domination and have been angered by recent
statements by some Turkish nationalist politicians suggesting that oil-rich areas of northern Iraq, including the Kurdish enclave, should be part of
Turkey.
Northern Iraq was part of the Ottoman Empire for centuries and some
Turkish nationalists have questioned the treaty that put the area in Iraq and not Turkey after the collapse of the empire following World War I.
``It is an area which had been forcibly separated,'' Defense Minister
Sabahattin Cakmakoglu said Tuesday. ``Northern Iraq is under our
safekeeping.''
The statement sparked outrage from the Kurdistan Democratic Party,
which controls about half of the autonomous enclave in northern Iraq.
The KDP warned that it will turn northern Iraq into a ``graveyard'' for the
Turks if they enter. The KDP is believed to be able to mobilize some 40,000 fighters.
Turkey also recently announced that it is choking off vital border trade that
is a critical source of funding for the KDP.
Diesel imports from the Kurdish region ended in February and Turkish
officials announced last week that the trade will not be restarted.
The Kurdish enclave depends on the smuggling of diesel to Turkey for a
large part of its income. Sources say that the KDP has only been able to pay half the salaries of officials due to the cutoff in trade.
``Do they expect to implement their own filthy objective in the U.S. attack
on Iraq?'' Brayeti, the KDP's newspaper asked in an editorial. A translation of the Kurdish-language editorial was released on a Kurdish website close
to the KDP and verified by a KDP official.
``Let them try their luck in today's Kurdistan. They will ... witness that this
nation will turn ... Kurdistan into a graveyard for those who attack it,'' the newspaper said.
Turkish analysts seemed surprised by the harsh tone of the KDP's
reaction.
KDP leader Massoud Barzani ``should understand that he does not have
the luxury to lose the support of Turkey,'' columnist Sami Kohen wrote in Thursday's Milliyet newspaper. ``It would very useful for the U.S. to remind
him of this again.''
Turkish media have reported that Turkey recently refused to renew
Barzani's diplomatic passport. A Turkish intelligence source confirmed
that report. As Iraqi citizens living in territory that is not controlled by the
Iraqi government, most Kurds travel on old or forged Iraqi passports.
| Copyright
© 2002, Kurdistan Observer | Designed by Zine Sano |
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