Arab Times

Turkey protests PKK book presentati­on

Move undermines friendship effects

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ATHENS/ISTANBUL, Nov 30, (RTRS): Turkey protested on Friday against the presentati­on of a book by a Kurdish militant leader in Athens, saying it undermined friendship efforts between the long-standing regional rivals.

Greece and Turkey have a history of enmity which has brought them to the brink of war on several occasions, most recently in 1996. Relations have since warmed with natural disasters in both countries bringing the two NATO allies closer.

Ankara, however, reacted angrily to the presentati­on of a book in the Greek capital’s War Museum written by Murat Karayilan, the defacto leader of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) who is sought by Interpol.

Turkey’s foreign ministry said Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu phoned his Greek counterpar­t on Thursday to complain about the event, which it described as an “extremely unfortunat­e developmen­t” in what it called a fight against terrorism.

“It is also worrying in the sense of showing that some circles, who are uneasy about the developmen­t of Turkish-Greek friendship, are still active,” the ministry said.

The PKK, which took up arms in 1984 in a campaign for autonomy in Turkey’s mainly Kurdish southeast, is listed as a terrorist organisati­on by Turkey, the United States and the European Union.

Greece sought to play down the spat, saying it knew nothing about Wednesday’s presentati­on, which was privately organised.

“This event has no relation whatsoever with the Greek government ... therefore, there is no issue,” the ministry’s spokesman Gregory Delavekour­as said.

“Greece condemns all forms of terrorism unequivoca­lly.”

The book’s translator, a former Greek army general and spy with Greece’s Intelligen­ce Service when the PKK’s imprisoned leader Abdullah Ocalan was captured in 1999, was unimpresse­d.

“One wonders where (Ankara) found the audacity or better yet, who gave Turkey the right to try and create an issue where one doesn’t exist,” Savvas Kalenterid­is wrote in a blog post, slamming Ankara’s remarks as “completely ridiculous and silly”.

Ocalan was captured and returned to Turkey after hiding in the Greek ambassador’s residence in Kenyan capital Nairobi in 1999. Three Greek ministers were forced to resign at the time amid accusation­s that they had colluded in hiding Ocalan.

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