Two killed, four wounded as a result of an attack by PKK on a military vehicle in Turkey
Araz News: A car bomb attack killed two Turkish soldiers in the Kurdish-dominated southeast of the country, after separatist rebels warned they would no longer observe a truce after Ankara’s air strikes on their positions in Iraq, officials said July 26,HDN reported.
Turkey has launched a two-pronged “anti-terror” cross-border offensive against Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) jihadists and the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) militants after a wave of violence in the country, pounding their positions with air strikes and artillery.
But the expansion of the campaign to include not just ISIL targets in Syria but PKK rebels in neighbouring northern Iraq bitterly opposed to the jihadists has put in jeopardy a truce with the Kurdish militants that has largely held since 2013.
The PKK on July 25 said that the conditions were no longer in place to observe the ceasefire, following the heaviest Turkish air strikes on its positions in northern Iraq since August 2011.
The car bomb went off as the soldiers were travelling on a road in the Lice district of Diyarbakır province late July 25, the statement from the local governor’s office said.
“Two of our personnel were killed in the heinous attack, four were wounded,” said the statement, adding that large-scale operations have been launched to find the perpetrators. There was no immediate claim of responsibility.
The PKK has for decades waged a deadly insurgency in the southeast of Turkey for self-rule that has claimed tens of thousands of lives. A peace process that began in 2013 has so far failed to yield a final deal.
“The ceasefire appears to be over,” said David Romano, Professor of Middle East Politics at Missouri State University in emailed comments, arguing that the main focus of the Turkish military campaign was the PKK rather than ISIL.
Turkish armed forces on July 25 pressed on with a new wave of strikes against ISIL andPKK targets, but there were no reports of new air raids overnight.
The military wing of the PKK said in a statement that one PKK fighter in northern Iraq — named as Onder Aslan — was killed in air strikes overnight Friday to Saturday and three others wounded.
The president of the Kurdish-ruled autonomous region in northern Iraq, Massud Barzani, expressed “displeasure with the dangerous level the situation has reached,” his office said.
Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu ordered the launch of campaign after a week of violence in Turkey which began on July 20 with a suicide bombing blamed on ISIL in a town close to the Syrian border that killed 32.
This incensed Turkey’s Kurds who have long accused the government of actively colluding with ISIL, allegations Ankara categorically denies.
Two Turkish policeman were shot dead July 25 while sleeping in their homes in the southeast, in murders claimed by the PKK.
The violence has fanned fears that the conflict in Syria’s civil war between ISIL and Kurdish militias allied to the PKK is spilling into Turkish territory.
With Turkey still without a permanent government after a June 7 election resulted in the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) losing its overall majority for the first time since 2002, parliament has been summoned to meet on July 22 to discuss the security situation.
Tensions across the country are high, with police routinely using water cannon to disperse nightly protests in Istanbul and other cities denouncing ISIL and the government’s policies on Syria.
Police violently dispersed a demonstration in Ankara late July 25, using water cannon and making dozens of arrests.
The Istanbul authorities banned a planned anti-jihadist “peace march” scheduled to take place in Istanbul on July 26, citing security and traffic congestion.
Turkish security forces have also been rounding up hundreds of suspected members of ISIL, the PKK and other militant groups on the grounds they pose a threat to the state.
A total of 590 people have so far been arrested, Davutoğlu said.
One of those held in Istanbul was a senior ISIL manager in charge of foreign recruits in the city, named as Abdullah Abdullayev, a Russian from the North Caucasus region of Dagestan, the state-run Anadolu Agency said.
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