Arab News

Rebels in northern Iraq, says report

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ISTANBUL: Turkey is planning in the next weeks to launch a new cross border military incursion to oust the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) from the Sinjar region of northern Iraq, a report said on Thursday.

The report in the pro-government Yeni Safak daily was not immediatel­y confirmed by Turkish officials but President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has over the last days indicated an operation in northern Iraq could be in the offing.

Turkey last week announced it had completed its half-year Euphrates Shield operation in northern Syria against militants and Kurdish militia, although it is keeping a presence to maintain security in towns now under control of pro-Ankara Syrian fighters.

But Erdogan this week said Euphrates Shield was only a “first stage” and new military operations were being planned, including for Sinjar.

Yeni Safak said the new operation would begin in late April or May, after Turkey’s crucial April 16 referendum on expanding Erdogan’s powers.

It will be called Tigris Shield after the other great river in Mesopotami­a, it added, and involve thousands of tanks, vehicles and artillery pieces used in the Syria operation.

Yeni Safak claimed the PKK had built up nine camps in the Sinjar region after moving in from 2014 to oust Daesh militants who have massacred the area’s Yazidi residents.

It said the aim of the operation would be to cut off any contact between Sinjar and the Qandil mountain area in Iraq to the further north, where the PKK has its main rear bases.

The incursion would also prevent cooperatio­n between the PKK in Iraq and Kurdish militia in Syria that Ankara accuses of being the Syrian wing of the PKK.

 ??  ?? Turkish soldiers patrol near the border with Syria. (AP)
Turkish soldiers patrol near the border with Syria. (AP)

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