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THE STANS
Iraqi Kurdistan leadership wants PKK pullback
by Staff Writers
Arbil, Iraq (AFP) Aug 1, 2015


Turkey 'probes claims Iraqi Kurdish civilians killed in air strike'
Ankara (AFP) Aug 1, 2015 - Turkey on Saturday said it has opened an investigation into claims that several civilians were killed in an air strike against militants from the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) in northern Iraq.

Iraqi Kurdish officials said Saturday six people had been killed in a pre-dawn strike by Turkish war planes on the village of Zarkel in northern Iraq.

Pro-Kurdish media described the attack as a "massacre" which had left at least nine civilians dead.

The controversy comes after almost a week of intensive bombing by Turkey of PKK targets in the remote mountains of northern Iraq, where the separatist group's military wing is based.

"An investigation has been initiated into the allegations," the Turkish foreign ministry said in a statement, adding that the reports had been received "with sorrow".

"All the allegations that have been brought forward will be investigated fully," it added, saying a joint study would be conducted with the regional authorities in Iraqi Kurdistan.

It said the air operation early Saturday was aimed at a camp used by the PKK for logistics and coordination purposes.

All targets during the campaign have been chosen in areas where intelligence shows there are no civilians, the ministry said.

But it also accused the PKK of using "civilians as human shields".

"The findings that will be attained as a result of these probes will be shared with the public as soon as possible."

The PKK's insurgency for greater rights and powers for Turkey's Kurdish minority, begun more than 30 years ago, has left tens of thousands dead. A ceasefire declared in 2013 has been shattered by the current violence.

The Kurdish local authorities in northern Iraq earlier Saturday said the PKK should take the war with Ankara out of their region to prevent Turkish air strikes from causing civilian casualties.

Kurdish rebels of the PKK should take their war with Ankara out of Iraqi Kurdistan to prevent Turkish air strikes from causing civilian casualties, the region's leadership said Saturday.

"The PKK (Kurdistan Workers' Party) must keep the battlefield away from the Kurdistan region in order for civilians not to become victims of this war," the office of the region's president Massud Barzani said in a statement.

Turkey has carried out hundreds of raids against the Kurdish rebel group's mountain bases on either side of the Iraqi border.

The PKK itself has admitted to only a handful of deaths in its ranks but the official Turkish news agency Anatolia on Saturday put the figure at around 260, although it gave no source.

Several civilians have been killed and wounded in the air campaign, which Ankara launched a week ago following a wave of attacks in Turkey.

Barzani's Kurdistan Democratic Party has often been at odds with the PKK but has long allowed its fighters to take shelter from the Turkish army in remote mountain regions on the Iraqi side of the border.

In the same statement, the presidency also urged the PKK and the Turkish government to resume a peace process which the recent violence has all but shattered.

"The Kurdistan presidency is clear in demanding that the PKK keep its military bases away from the region in order not to give the Turkish government any justification when it bombs civilians," Kifah Mahmud, a Barzani adviser, told AFP.

"If the PKK did not have bases inside the region, Turkey would not be bombing civilians," he said.

"The region's presidency has asked the PKK to take its forces out, especially since there is an agreement between the Iraqi and Turkish governments allowing Turkish forces to enter the Iraqi side."

Ankara and Baghdad signed a "hot pursuit" agreement in the era of now executed dictator Saddam Hussein, allowing both sides to hunt down Kurdish rebels 15 kilometres (10 miles) into each other's territory.

Mahmud said the agreement was still valid.

Barzani's party has enjoyed good relations with Turkey, a major investor and trading partner for the autonomous region.

- Keep away from populated areas -

The Kurdistan Regional Government later issued a statement taking a softer line, simply demanding both sides shift their battle away from populated areas.

"We urge Turkey to refrain from bombing villages and populated area in the region, at the same time we urge the PKK to keep its forces, bases and institutions away from villages and populated areas," the statement said.

Targeted by Turkey's raids since last week were several training camps in the mountains north of Dohuk, in the western part of the Kurdistan region, near the border with Syria.

The Qandil mountains, which lie to the northeast of regional capital Arbil, have also been targeted. It is where the PKK's political leadership has been based for years.

At least six people, including two women, were killed in Turkish air strikes on the village of Zarkel, near the Qandil mountains on Saturday, local officials said.


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