Arab Times

Turkish forces kill 25 Kurdish rebels in southeast operation

Daily holds editorial meeting outside prison

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DIYARBAKIR, Turkey, Dec 17, (AFP): Turkish security forces have killed 25 Kurdish militants this week as they battle suspected members of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) inside two flashpoint towns, security sources said on Thursday.

The operations conducted inside the towns of Cizre and Silopi in the southeaste­rn Sirnak province, backed by curfews, mark a new escalation in five months of fighting with the PKK since a truce collapsed.

Twenty-four PKK members have been killed in Cizre since the operations began earlier this week, while one was killed in Silopi, security sources told AFP, increasing an earlier toll.

The authoritie­s had already announced on Wednesday that eight PKK fighters had been killed in Cizre.

According to Turkish media, some 10,000 members of the police and army have been deployed in Cizre and Silopi in one of the biggest operations yet against the PKK, who have erected barricades and ditches inside the towns.

Although analysts have called for peace talks, the authoritie­s led by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan have said Ankara must “eradicate” the PKK which in recent months has again built up a significan­t presence in urban centres. “The terrorists wanted to paralyse daily life in these towns by intimidati­ng inhabitant­s who they had extorted,” Interior Minister Efkan Ala told the staterun Anatolia news agency.

Cizre has a population of some 100,000, while Silopi has over 80,000 people.

He said the authoritie­s had seized 2,240 weapons, ten tons of explosives and 10,000 Molotov cocktails from the militants.

Images published by Anatolia showed heavily armed soldiers backed by tanks going house-tohouse in the towns and firing from street corners.

The authoritie­s also imposed blanket and open-ended curfews in the two towns, the latest in a succession of such measures across the southeast that have angered activists.

There have also been growing tensions over a curfew in the Sur district of southeaste­rn Diyarbakir province — also mainly Kurdish — that has been in place almost uninterrup­ted since Dec 2.

There were new clashes early Thursday between police and pro-PKK sympathise­rs in Diyarbakir, an AFP correspond­ent reported.

In a new report Thursday, the Internatio­nal Crisis Group (ICG) urged both sides to “urgently” resume peace talks, saying Turkey’s return to a militaryba­sed approach would only intensify the conflict.

“Turkey faces a critical choice: to advance its military strategy against the PKK in a fight that is bound to be protracted and inconclusi­ve, or to resume peace talks,” the non-government­al think tank said.

The ICG said that rather than talking to jailed PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan, Turkey’s “strategy is instead centred on fighting the PKK, particular­ly until its recently empowered urban structures are eradicated.”

The PKK launched a formal insurgency against the Turkish state in 1984, initially fighting for Kurdish independen­ce although it now presses more for greater autonomy and rights for the country’s largest ethnic minority. The conflict has left tens of thousands dead.

A Turkish opposition newspaper held its daily morning editorial meeting outside an Istanbul prison where two of its journalist­s are held on spying charges in a case that sparked an outcry at home and abroad.

A Muslim woman takes a selfie picture in front of a Christian manger on Dec 16 in the West Bank city of Bethlehem on the Manger Square near the Church of the Nativity, revered as the site of Jesus Christ’s birth, as the site is deserted by tourists and pilgrims notably due to a

wave of violence that has hit the Palestinia­n Territorie­s, Jerusalem and Israel since Oct 1. (AFP)

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