By Hu Dandan, Wang Qiang
DIYARBAKIR, Turkey, Nov. 9 (Xinhua) -- For the
citizens of the southeastern Turkish city of Diyarbakir, the buzzing of fighting
jets has become the order of the day in the past month, during which F-16 jets
heading to and from the Turkish-Iraqi border fly overhead every morning.
Local residents said it is less than 15 minutes'
flight from the military airbase in the city to the border, where air exercises
as well as reconnaissance and fighting operations are launched to deal with the
militants from the outlawed Kurdish Workers' Party (PKK) based in northern Iraq.
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Turkish commandos sit in military
vehicles as they move in a convoy in the south-eastern Turkish province of
Sirnak, bordering Iraq, Nov. 8, 2007. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo)
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Besides air force, Turkey has massed up to 100,000
troops along the mountainous border with Iraq in preparations for a cross-border
operation to crush about 3,000-strong PKK rebels in light of a motion approved
by the parliament last month.
Moving around in the border region nowadays can be a
troublesome, if not dangerous thing. Every morning at daybreak, mine sweeping
soldiers operate to clear the way in the border provinces of Sirnak and Hakkari,
where PKK activities are most frequent.
Roaming in the southern province of Sirnak and on the
way to Hakkari, Xinhua reporters ran into numerous check points manned by
soldiers and have been politely denied access to roadways "for security reasons"
for twice.
Along the way, military vehicles carrying equipment
from cannons and armed vehicles to daily necessities can be seen from time to
time.
Heading north from the closest Turkish city to the
Iraqi border, Silopi in the Sirnak province to Diyarbakir, the capital of the
Diyarbakir province, the reporters ran into many uneasy Kurdish residents.
"Nobody wants a war, which would damage the brotherly
relations between the Turks and Kurds, and hopefully there won't be one so that
we can stay comfortably at home for the coming winter," said Haci Ozkul, who was
picking this year's last batch of cotton in his golden-colored field under
afternoon sunshine along with his daughter and five grandchildren.
Mehmet, the keeper of a gas station along the
highway, earnestly treated the reporters with tea and urged us to give
evaluation on the situation on hearing that we were from the deeper southern
border.
He was visibly worried about the situation as well as
the prospect of a possible Turk-Kurd polarization triggered by the latest
activities of the PKK, especially the Oct. 21 PKK attacks against the troops in
the Hakkari province, which left 12 soldiers dead.
According to him, since that attack, many of his
Batmanlilar transportation chain company's buses were vandalized in the
northwestern parts of the country, simply because their plates indicated that
they were from the southeastern region, where most Kurds live and PKK activities
are more active.
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A Turkish soldier holds his weapon as he
patrols an area surrounded by the rugged mountains in the southeastern
Turkish province of Sirnak, bordering Iraq, Nov. 9, 2007.(Xinhua/Reuters
Photo)
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The Turkish government pledges to maintain its
determination to take political, diplomatic and military initiatives to fight
against the PKK despite a pivotal meeting between Turkish Prime Minister Recep
Tayyip Erdogan and U.S. President George W. Bush in Washington on Monday, which
many think staved off a major Turkish incursion into Northern Iraq.
One day after the meeting, the Turkish Prime Ministry
said on Tuesday that military means against the PKK remained on the table.
Experts say that while major cross-border actions now
seeming unlikely, Turkey is probably thinking about a limited offensive
involving raids and aerial assaults, which might include F-16 strikes on rebel
positions, helicopter raids and special forces missions.
Many local Kurds, while sympathizing for the PKK
which they believe are fighting for a righteous cause of seeking more rights for
the Kurdish minorities, began to worry about their livelihood with a war or at
least economic sanctions in prospect.
Turkey is pondering economic sanctions against
northern Iraq, which might involve closure of border. That would devastate the
livelihood of many local Kurds who bet their life savings on the truck route
that passes through the Habur gate border in Silopi into Iraq.
Compared to the flourishing northwestern regions, the
economy of southeastern Turkey, home to a majority Kurdish population, was
visibly far lagged behind, and the inhabitants in the Kurdish region are
substantially poorer, less educated and more unemployed than any other part of
the country.
Many Kurds are worried about a longer and more
pressing sore --unemployment and poverty, even more than a possible war.
Hakki, the owner of a coffee and tea shop in
Diyarbakir said that his shop is one of the trades still flourishing in town, as
with an unemployment rate as high as 60 percent in the region, coffee shops
become a major low-cost haven for many unemployed city dwellers.
Poverty gives rise to crimes like theft. When learned
that one of the reporters got pocket-picked days ago in the region, Hakki got
excited and said he just lost 570 Turkish lira (495 U.S. dollars) on Friday
morning in an errand to a poorer neighborhood.
When he turned to police, he learned that the only thing he could do was to be more careful next time. "It is hard to find a suspect, as even a five or six-year-old in this neighborhood can be a professional," he was told.
Iraq's Kurdish government cuts off aid
to PKK rebels
MOSUL, Iraq, Nov. 5 (Xinhua) -- Northern Iraq's Kurdish
regional government (KRG) said Monday it has tightened its measures to isolate
the separatist Kurdish Workers' Party (PKK), a Kurdish source said.
"The cabinet of the regional Kurdish government
approved instructions to the security forces to cut off all kinds of aid that
may reach the PKK fighters," the source close to the Kurdish government told
Xinhua on condition of anonymity. Full story
Iraqi PM offers new proposal on fight
against PKK
ISTANBUL, Turkey, Nov. 3 (Xinhua) -- Iraqi Prime Minister
Nuri al-Maliki on Saturday offered Turkish PM Recep Tayyip Erdogan new proposals
in the fight against the outlawed Kurdish Workers' Party (PKK) which includes
closing down PKK offices and arresting PKK members.
Iraqi government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh revealed
al-Maliki's offer to reporters at the sidelines of the ongoing International
conference on Iraq. Full story