Text Only
Search

Turkish Air Strikes Target Kurdish Rebels in Iraq

10 October 2008

Turkey's military says it has launched air strikes in northern Iraq on Kurdish rebels trying to slip across the border.

A military spokesman says the rebels were detected while trying to enter Turkey late Thursday.  He says most of them were killed.

But a spokesman for the rebel Kurdistan Workers Party, or PKK, says none of its fighters was in the targeted area and that the group suffered no losses from the airstrike.

Turkish officials had been considering new actions against Kurdish rebels following two recent attacks on security forces.  A week ago, Kurdish fighters carried out the deadliest rebel attack in months, killing 15 Turkish soldiers in a raid on a military outpost in southeastern Turkey, close to the Iraqi border.   Seven people were killed Wednesday in an attack on a police vehicle, also in the southeast.

Earlier this week, Turkish lawmakers approved extending a mandate for the military to continue operations in northern Iraq for another year.  Turkey accuses Iraq of not doing enough to stop PKK rebels based in Iraqi Kurdistan.   Iraqi officials deny the accusation.

The PKK has been fighting for Kurdish autonomy in southeastern Turkey since 1984.  The violence has killed at least 37,000 people.

Turkey, the United States and the European Union consider the PKK a terrorist group.


Some information for this report was provided by AFP and AP.

emailme.gif E-mail This Article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version

  Related Stories
Turkish Leaders Mull Iraq Buffer Zone
 
  Top Story
Obama Plan to Create 2.5 Million Jobs by 2011

  More Stories
APEC Defends Free Trade Stand At Summit in Peru
Iraqi Lawmakers Ready to Vote on US Security Deal
Greenpeace Protests Against Polluting Cars in Rome
Ukraine Remembers Victims of Famine 75 Years Later  Audio Clip Available
Fugitive British Militant Killed in Strike in Pakistan  Audio Clip Available
Tibetans Vote for No More Talks with China  Audio Clip Available
Arab World Reacts Cautiously to US New Ambassador to Libya  Audio Clip Available
Muslim Religious Leaders in Australia Blamed for Not Protecting Women  Audio Clip Available
South Africa's Archbishop Tutu Gets Fulbright Award  Audio Clip Available