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SYRIA Turkish intense bombing Kurdish positions in northern Aleppo

February 19, 2016 By administrator

122364-468x238Beirut, February 19, 2016 (AFP) – Turkey bombed intensely Thursday night areas controlled by the Kurds in the northern province of Aleppo, Syria, reported the Syrian Observatory of Human Rights (OSDH). “Turkey bombards Kurdish areas north of Aleppo, in his strongest attack against these regions since it started bombarding their positions in the last few days,” the NGO said. The bombing lasted for over five hours and continued, according to the NGO.

The director of the SOHR, Rami Abdel Rahman, told AFP that the bombing targeted the Kurdish stronghold of Afrin, not only controlled areas recently by the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDS), an Arab coalition Kurdish largely dominated by the Kurds protection Units (YPG).

Supported by Russian air raids, the SDS took control of several areas that were controlled by the rebels in the northern province of Aleppo, near the Turkish border.

The FDS Advanced alarm Turkey which bombards since Saturday. Ankara hit for the first time Thursday the city of Afrin, where two civilians were killed and 28 others wounded, according to Abdel Rahman.

The province of Aleppo is now split into several bands from the Turkish border: the rebels in the north, closely followed by more Kurdish southeast, and then there are the prorégime forces that control the majority of the southern province, while the group jihadist Islamic state (EI) control areas to the east.

Friday, February 19, 2016,
Ara © armenews.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: intense bombing, Kurdish, positions, Syria, Turkish

Kurdish Exclusion From Peace Talks the Result of Turkey ‘Blackmailing’ West

January 28, 2016 By administrator

1033793661Despite being one of the most effective ground forces in the region, the Kurdish PYD has been barred from participating in Syrian peace. Elif Sarican of the Kurdish Student Union, tells Radio Sputnik’s Loud & Clear why the PYD has been left on the sidelines.

“They have been heroic, and they have been, I would say, the sole reason why, in Kobane, ISIS was defeated,” Sarican tells Loud & Clear. “It’s been shocking for all of us that they’re not being included in these Syrian peace talks in Geneva.”

Those talks begin Friday, seeking an end to Syria’s bloody conflict. According to Sarican, Western nations have refused to allow the Kurdish Democratic Union Party (PYD) to join the talks for fear of upsetting Turkey, especially considering Ankara’s role in slowing the flow of refugees in mainland Europe.

“Turkey has been very smart about blackmailing the EU about this situation. So, ‘You either give us what we want, or we send the refugees your way,'” she says.

“Turkey does not want Kurds to gain any power or strength in the region because this challenges their authority.”

Ankara is also a crucial ally of the United States.

“Their geopolitical position in the region is key for the US at the moment, and I think has been for some time now,” Sarican says. “[The US] cannot lose Turkey as an ally, so therefore, they cannot upset Turkey.”

A stronger Kurdish presence could also help provide stability in the region – something the US has an interest in preventing.

“It wouldn’t benefit the US for the PYD to gain any more strength or power in the region, and to implement their ideologies, which is democratic federalism, which is the inclusion of everyone in the region, which is…the only solution to the Middle East,” she says.

“But this will mean stability in the Middle East, which, of course, as we know, will never benefit the US because it feeds off…this instability.”

Sarican also points out that Washington’s intervention in Syria is more about a desperate attempt to hold onto its status as the sole world superpower.

“Especially after Russia got involved, and they were, of course, as everyone saw, a lot more effective than the US had been over the last few years,” she says.

“The solution isn’t for humanitarian reasons or because they [the US] want people to live peacefully…they want to be the people behind some sort of action in the world,” Sarican adds. “They want to be seen as the saviors of the world.”

While the PYD is one of the most effective fighting forces, it could also be the best hope of diplomacy.

“The real idea of democracy is what the PYD would want to implement and what their direction would be in Syria.”

Given the long history of Turkey’s mistreatment of Kurdish communities, the PYD is simply fighting for a chance to live free of repression.

“They want human rights, to start with, but then they want to be able to govern themselves. They want to be able to say they’re Kurdish, they want to be able to be educated in Kurdish, and they want to be able to live the way they want to live.”

Source: sputniknews.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Exclusion, Kurdish, Peace, talks, Turkey

Syria: Trial of Kurdish fighters have damaged property

January 21, 2016 By administrator

The main Syrian Kurdish militia said Tuesday it arrested four of its fighters accused of damaged properties in a community decision to jihadist Islamic State Group (EI).

This news comes after accusations of activists and Amnesty International on abuse of Kurdish forces against Arab residents in areas listed in EI in northern Syria.

In a statement, the Kurdish people’s Protection Units (YPG) indicate that four of its members were arrested “on charges of damaging property of citizens in al-Hol and surrounding villages” in the province of Hasaka (northeast).

“At the end of the investigation and interrogations, their membership of YPG was withdrawn and they will go on trial in court” the statement said.

The four defendants were identified by their initials and pictures of them taken back were broadcast.

Al-Hol was taken in November at the EI by a coalition of Kurdish and Arab fighters.

The arrests come in the wake of several reports of tensions between the YPG and the Arab inhabitants of the northern regions of Syria where the militia led battles against the IE with air support from the coalition led by the United STATES.

In October, Amnesty International accused the Kurdish forces to engage in forced displacement and destruction of homes in the north and northeast of the country consideration of these acts of “war crimes”.

The NGO claimed that they were carrying out “collective punishment campaigns” against residents, Arab majority, villages formerly held by the EI.

YPG had denounced these accusations and emphasized its alliance with Arab combatant groups which “removes any doubt” in their desire on any discrimination against an ethnic group.

Amnesty and activists also accused the Kurdish forces to prevent people from returning to their village after the EI has been driven.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (OSDH) had recently reported demonstrations in Al-Hol people wanting to go home.

According to Kurdish forces, residents were not allowed to return during clearance operations or in places where the risk remained infiltration of IE.

Thursday, January 21, 2016,
Stéphane © armenews.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Arab, fighters, Kurdish, Syria, Trial

Kurdish Forces Bulldoze Thousands of Arab Homes in Northern Iraq

January 19, 2016 By administrator

1033406396According to a report by a prominent rights watchdog, Kurdish militias have destroyed thousands of homes belonging to Arabs in northern Iraq for their alleged support of the Daesh militant group.

MOSCOW (Sputnik) – Kurdish militias have destroyed thousands of homes belonging to Arabs in northern Iraq for their alleged support of the Daesh militant group, a report by a prominent rights watchdog said Wednesday.

“Peshmerga forces of the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) and Kurdish militias in northern Iraq have bulldozed, blown up and burned down thousands of homes in Arab villages,” Amnesty International said in the report.

The 46-page report documents widespread burning of homes and property in villages and towns in Nineveh, Kirkuk and Diyala governorates which Peshmerga forces captured from Daesh militants.

Accusations of widespread destruction in Arab communities were substantiated by a field investigation in 13 villages, satellite images and reports from over a hundred witnesses.

Many Arabs displaced by fighting in northern Iraq have been prevented from returning to their homes by Kurdish militias, while others were expelled after Peshmerga forces had taken control of the areas, the report said.

“They are examples of a wider pattern across the disputed areas of northern Iraq, where parties which had long vied for exclusive control of these areas are now intent on consolidating territorial gains,” the report said.

Amnesty International has called on KRG, as well as states from the US-led coalition providing support to Kurds, to take steps to ensure those responsible for the abuses are held accountable for what the watchdog said constituted a war crime.

Read more: 

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Arab, Bulldoze, forces, Iraq, Kurdish

Turkish police raid Kurdish party HDP offices in Istanbul, detain 5 party members

January 8, 2016 By administrator

HDP HQPolice officers from the counterterrorism unit of the İstanbul Police Department raided the Beyoğlu district building of the pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) early on Friday and detained five of its members.

Media reports say riot police and special ops teams also participated in the raid, which took place at around 7 a.m. Police officers arrived in armored vehicles and were backed by helicopters.

HDP Beyoğlu branch Co-chair Rukiye Demir and four others were detained during the raid, reports say.

The police’s search of the building lasted several hours. According to media reports, the raid was conducted as part of an investigation into the activities of the Patriotic Revolutionary Youth Movement (YDG-H) — an affiliate of the terrorist Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) — in İstanbul’s Beyoğlu and Şişli districts.

Several HDP district officials were also previously detained in police raids that have being conducted since the June 7 parliamentary election. The HDP accuses the Justice and Development Party (AK Party) government of seeking to punish it for its success in the inconclusive June election that deprived the ruling AK Party of its single-party majority in Parliament.

The renewed hostilities have wrecked efforts to establish lasting peace and have sparked some of the worst clashes in the 29-year-old PKK insurgency. Deemed a terrorist organization by Turkey, the United States and European Union, the PKK launched its armed campaign for a Kurdish homeland in southeast Turkey in 1984. The conflict has cost the country more than 40,000 lives.

Keywords: HDP , Beyoğlu

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: HDP, Kurdish, police, Turkish

Turkey: the irresistible rise of the Kurdish Selahattin Demirtas, Erdogan nightmare

October 30, 2015 By administrator

arton118037-480x270In the Turkish legislative approach Sunday, all eyes are turning to the Kurdish Demirtas, leader of the ruling Peoples Democratic Party and most serious rival of President Erdogan. Yet this charismatic candidate has difficulty campaigning.

read more…

http://www.france24.com/fr/20151028-turquie-ascension-kurde-selahattin-demirtas-erdogan-hdp-pkk-elections-legislatives ? utm_source = dlvr.it & utm_medium = 66054 = twitter & dlvrit

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Demirtas, Erdogan, Kurdish, nightmare, Selahattin

Syrian Kurdish leader says collapse of Assad regime ‘disaster for everyone’

September 28, 2015 By administrator

Salih Muslim, co-president of the Democratic Union Party PYD. Photo: AFP

Salih Muslim, co-president of the Democratic Union Party PYD. Photo: AFP

Patrick Cockburn | The Independent

QAMISHLO, Syrian Kurdistan,— The overthrow of President Bashar al-Assad by Isis and rebel groups that are affiliated to al-Qaeda would be a calamity for the world, says the Syrian Kurdish leader Saleh Muslim.

In an interview with The Independent he warned that “if the regime collapses because of the salafis [fundamentalist Islamic militants] it would be a disaster for everyone.”

Mr Muslim said he was fully in favour of Mr Assad and his government being replaced by a more acceptable alternative. But he is concerned that Isis and other extreme Islamist groups are now close to Damascus on several sides, saying that “this is dangerous”. During a recent Isis offensive in the north eastern city of Hasaka, the Kurdish YPG (People’s Protection Units) militia and the Syrian Army both came under attack from Isis, but Mr Muslim denied that there was any collaboration between the two.

The Syrian Kurds, previously marginalised and discriminated against by the Damascus government, have become crucial players in the country’s civil war over the last year. In January, they defeated Isis at Kobani with the aid of US airstrikes after a four-and-a-half month siege and their forces are still advancing. While Mr Muslim said that he wants an end to rule by Mr Assad, he makes clear that he considers Isis to be the main enemy.

“Our main goal is the defeat of Daesh [Isis],” he said. “We would not feel safe in our home so long as there is one Daesh [Isis] left alive.” The threat did not come from them alone, he said, but also from al-Qaeda clones such as Jabhat al-Nusra and Ahrar al-Sham. “They all have the same mentality.”

Mr Muslim is the president of the Democratic Union Party (PYD) that rules Rojava, as Kurds call the three Kurdish enclaves just south of the Turkish border. A stocky and affable man, aged 64, he apologised before the interview in the city of Ramalan for his broken English – though it turned out to be fluent, something explained by a year spent in Britain learning English and 12 years as an oil industry engineer in Saudi Arabia, where the working language was also English.

He says he is still surprised by the speed with which the Syrian Kurds have emerged from obscurity, since the withdrawal of the Syrian army from Kurdish enclaves in 2012, to become a major force in Syria. The highly-disciplined and committed YPG fighters have won victories over Isis this year at Kobani, Tal Abyad and Hasaka, at the same time that Isis was inflicting defeats on both the Iraqi and Syrian armies.

Mr Muslim and other PYD leaders now face an important decision about the future advance of YPG forces. Having retaken Kobani and 380 villages nearby, they are currently dug in on the east bank of the Euphrates River, close to Isis’s last remaining border crossing to Turkey at Jarabulus and to a larger, strategically important, area north of Aleppo. Turkey is wary of the YPG and is eager to create a so-called “safe zone” which would be held by Syrian opposition groups under its influence – ostensibly to keep Isis from its borders but thus also preventing Kurdish forces from advancing westwards.

Mr Muslim says the present situation cannot continue in this area because Kurdish civilians there are being attacked by Isis. Only the previous day, he said, 300 Kurds had been forced out of their homes in the Isis-held town of Manbij, where Kurds make up 30 per cent of the population, and seven people had been killed. Another 150 Kurdish villages are under threat.

Mr Muslim stressed the YPG was acting to defend not only Kurds, but all Syrians under attack by Isis. He said that if people living in the zone west of the Euphrates and north of Aleppo were “to ask the YPG for help” they would most likely get it. In addition, the Kurds want to open a road to a third Kurdish enclave at Afrin, which is isolated and under threat.

Noting the US wants an Isis-free zone in this area, Mr Muslim said “the perfect way to do this is ground troops and air support”. It is not entirely clear that the US will go along with this and give the YPG the air cover it may need, because it does not want to offend Turkey. However, the Syrian armed opposition is almost wholly dominated by Isis and its al-Qaeda equivalents, so the US does not want to damage the successful collaboration between YPG ground troops and US air power.

How would Turkey respond to a further Kurdish advance? It is already alarmed by the rise of a Kurdish state-let in the form of Rojava on its southern frontier with Syria. It knows that the PYD is essentially the Syrian branch of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) against whom it has been fighting a guerrilla war since 1984. Mr Muslim said: “I do not think it is possible that Turkey will invade, but if it does it will be a big problem for Turkey.”

Though the YPG is America’s most effective military ally against Isis in both Iraq and Syria, Washington remains ambivalent about the extent of its co-operation with the Syrian Kurds. Mr Muslim says that “the Americans have not delivered any weapons or ammunition to the YPG”.

They have reassured him their support for the Syrian Kurds will not be weakened by their agreement with Turkey, signed in July, for the US to use Incirlik airbase and for Turkey to join attacks against Isis.

In the event, Turkey launched few air raids against Isis and many hundreds against the PKK in south-east Turkey and northern Iraq. Mr Muslim says that since detachments of the PKK in northern Iraq are fighting Isis, the Turkish actions can only benefit the Islamic militants. He is only partially comforted by American reassurances, saying what worries him is “what has not been revealed” about the US-Turkish deal.

In the course of the interview, Mr Muslim would periodically say that the situation was confusing, but he is adept at seeking to conciliate rival powers. He had just returned from a meeting with President Masoud Barzani, who heads the Kurdistan Regional Government in northern Iraq and is himself wary of the sudden appearance of a rival Kurdish quasi-state in northern Syria. The KRG has been enforcing an intermittent embargo against Rojava, with some trucks waiting a couple of months on the frontier. Mr Muslim said the border was opening and closing “according to the mood” of KRG authorities.

He is dubious about reports of Russian troops joining the war in Syria. He had been in Moscow last month and had been assured that the Russians “would not do that. [Russian special envoy for Syria Mikhail] Bogdanov said to me that they would not be involved in the fighting.”

Though he is determined to fight Isis until it is defeated, Mr Muslim believes that the Syrian civil war must end in a compromise.

“In the end there should be political solution,” he says. “No side can finish off the other.”

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: assad, collapes, disaster, Kurdish, leader

A new generation of Kurdish militants takes fight to Turkey’s cities

September 27, 2015 By administrator

Kurdish youth fighting Turkish security forces in Sirnak province in Turkish Kurdistan, August 2015. Photo: Twitter

Kurdish youth fighting Turkish security forces in Sirnak province in Turkish Kurdistan, August 2015. Photo: Twitter

DIYARBAKIR-AMED, Turkey’s Kurdish region,— Young, urban-based fighters, many of them still teenagers, have taken centre-stage in the conflict between Kurdish militants and Turkish security forces that has flared anew in southeast Turkey since a two-year ceasefire fell apart in July.

The intensity of the violence recalls for some the 1990s, when the insurgency waged by the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) was at its peak and thousands were being killed annually, though the death toll remains for now well below those levels.

The fighters from the PKK’s youth wing, known as the ‘Patriotic Revolutionary Youth Movement’ (YDG-H), attack security forces in cities and towns with heavy weapons, dig trenches and erect barricades down side streets.

The police retaliate by imposing curfews and launching dragnet security operations, most controversially this month in the Kurdish town of Cizre near Turkey’s borders with Iraq and Syria where at least 20 people were killed.

More than 150 Turkish police officers and soldiers have died in the violence since July, many of them in cities and towns, government officials say, marking a departure from the PKK’s traditional focus on more rural areas.

“We are facing an effort to bring the war of armed groups in rural areas into the cities,” Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu told A Haber television in an interview this month.

The escalating bloodshed in Turkish Kurdistan, the mainly Kurdish southeast region, has exacerbated already sky-high political tensions in Turkey ahead of a snap Nov. 1 parliamentary election, with President Tayyip Erdogan and the ruling AK Party accusing pro-Kurdish lawmakers of being in cahoots with the PKK.

It also complicates international efforts to combat Islamic State fighters across the border in Syria: Turkey says there are links between the PKK and Kurdish groups in Syria who work with a U.S.-led alliance bombing Islamic State.

The PKK is considered as ‘terrorist’ organization by Ankara and U.S. The PKK continues to be on the blacklist list in EU despite court ruling which overturned a decision to place the Kurdish rebel group PKK and its political wing on the European Union’s terror list.

The Turkish military has resumed its attacks on PKK camps in Iraqi Kurdistan while also joining the U.S.-led campaign of air strikes against Islamic State, the hardline Islamists who have seized territory across the Turkish border in Syria and Iraq.

Inside Turkey, the YDG-H militants, largely untrained but determined to fight what they see as an oppressive Turkish state, say they have strong support from local people in a region long blighted by violence and poverty.

“There is a large mass of people who have huge sympathy and support for us. They are not armed but they do help us,” said 19-year-old Nuda, who said she had abandoned her education after high school to become a full-time insurgent.

Turkish government officials say the renewed violence in the southeast, where residents had cherished two years of calm as Erdogan’s government conducted peace talks with the PKK, has actually dented local support for the militants.

TRENCHES AND BARRICADES

Since it was established in 1984 the PKK has been fighting the Turkish state, which still denies the constitutional existence of Kurds, with the aim of creating an independent Kurdish state.

In the 1990s, the PKK limited its demands to establish an autonomous Kurdish region and more cultural rights for ethnic Kurds,who make up around 22.5 million of the country’s 75-million population but have long been denied basic political and cultural rights, its goal to political autonomy. A large Turkey’s Kurdish community openly sympathise with PKK rebels.

Turkey’s jailed PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan was jailed in 1999 but still has considerable influence in the PKK, whose senior commanders are based in the Qandil mountains of Iraqi Kurdistan.

The YDG-H, many of whose members were born in the traumatic 1990s, was only founded in 2006. The precise nature of its relationship with the PKK leadership is unclear, though there can be no doubting its dedication to the separatist cause.

“Police and soldiers come to your neighbourhood to detain you or intimidate you. We aim to prevent them from doing that by digging trenches and barricades,” said YDG-H fighter Mawa, speaking hurriedly while his comrades nervously stood guard, looking out for security patrols.

“We have units in every street, every neighbourhood across Kurdistan,” he said, his face concealed by a scarf.

Mawa, who said he had left university after a year to join the YDG-H, joked that, at 26, he was one of the oldest members of the group.

He was standing behind a community building in the Sur district of Diyarbakir, the biggest city of southeast Turkey, where authorities imposed a brief curfew this month after YDG-H militants killed two police officers.

YDG-H members say their group has grown rapidly but refuse to give a number. Mawa and other members described it as “semi-independent” of the PKK leadership, though Ankara refutes this.

“We act in line with the rules of the (PKK) leadership and its perspective against the destructive policies of the state,” said 23-year-old Sorxin, another young militant in Diyarbakir.

A Turkish foreign ministry official, however, insisted the YDG-H took its orders directly from senior PKK commanders.

“They are not flash mobs, they do not tweet each other and meet up,” said the official. “It is a structure and that structure is being directed from Qandil.”

One PKK fighter deployed to a base near the Iraqi city of Kirkuk told Reuters the reality was more ambivalent.

“They (the YDG-H) don’t have a direct relationship with the leadership because then they would be found out,” said the militant, who gave his name as “Kani Kobani”, sitting in a room with machine guns propped against the wall.

“The leadership gives general directions via TV. All the comrades watch TV. We know how to interpret the message.”

CURFEWS

Turkey’s Anadolu Agency, citing security officials, said this month the PKK had kidnapped more than 2,000 people below the age of 18 in the past two years to be used in its attacks.

Officials say as many as 70 YDG-H militants were involved in this month’s clashes in Cizre, where police imposed a round-the-clock curfew for more than a week.

Lawmakers from the pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) say 21 civilians were killed in Cizre and that people went hungry for days and could not bury their dead.

Turkey’s interior minister said only one civilian and 32 militants had been killed in the Cizre clashes.

The HDP, whose success in Turkey’s inconclusive June election deprived the AKP of its single-party majority in parliament, accuses the authorities of imposing curfews in areas that support the pro-Kurdish party in order to “punish” voters and intimidate them into not participating in the Nov. 1 poll.

The government denies such suggestions, saying the curfews are aimed at facilitating its operations against the YDG-H militants holed up in urban areas.

Officials are also very aware that a heavy security crackdown could prove counterproductive by further radicalising Kurds in the countdown to the Nov. 1 election and they acknowledge that having to fight teenagers complicates the aim of defeating the PKK.

“What do you do when a 15-year-old shoots at you? You shoot back,” the foreign ministry official said. “The police have to justify their actions and it’s very controversial.”

Suleyman Ozeren, a security analyst for the Ankara-based think-tank Global Policy and Strategy, said he expected no swift resolution of the conflict.

“There’s a very thin line between the terrorists and the (local) population … Turkey can degrade the PKK but it will take time, especially in the cities,” he said.

Source: eKurd

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Kurd, Kurdish, militants, new generation, Turkey

Kurdish Mayor of Igdir Installs ‘Welcome’ Sign in Armenian

September 23, 2015 By administrator

The newly-installed signs welcome visitors to Tuzluca in Turkish, Kurdish, English, and Armenian (Source: Public Radio of Armenia)

The newly-installed signs welcome visitors to Tuzluca in Turkish, Kurdish, English, and Armenian (Source: Public Radio of Armenia)

IGDIR, Turkey (Combined Sources)—A sign near the entrance to the town of Tuzluca (Koghb) in Turkey’s Igdir province welcomes visitors in four languages, including Armenian.

Mehmet Gultekin, Mayor of Tuzluca and a member of the Kurdistan Democratic Party, said that the word “Welcome” was written on the sign in Armenian because the town borders Armenia and used to be inhabited by Armenians, who called it Koghb.

Gultekin stressed that although the names of many places in Turkey have been renamed, people continue to call them by their Armenian names.

“Before the establishment of the Turkish Republic, Tuzluca had been an Armenian-populated area. An Armenian cemetery has been preserved, which is called [the] Armenian cemetery [by] people. Armenians lived here; they created this region and wrote history. We treated all this with respect and wrote ‘Welcome’ in Armenian. We don’t feel uncomfortable writing in Armenian. On the contrary, we are very happy. We’ll again make friends with Armenia, trade together and develop tourism. Armenians are our brothers and nothing will hinder our plans,” Gultekin said.

Meanwhile, ermenihaber.am reports that the so-called “Turkish Organization for Fighting Against Baseless Armenian Allegations” (ASIMDER) has demanded the removal of the Armenian sign at the entry and exit of Tuzluca.

As a sign of protest, ASIMDER has reportedly raised a six-meter long Azerbaijani flag in front of the organization’s office in Igdir. The organization said they have sent an official note to the government and the governor’s office, demanding that the sign be taken down.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Commander resigns as divisions among Syrian rebel forces widen, Iğdır, Kurdish, mayor, sign, welcome

Dyarbakir Five policemen killed in southeastern mainly Kurdish Turkey

September 16, 2015 By administrator

Wednesday16 September 2015 by Ara / armenews
Five policemen were killed in southeastern mainly Kurdish Turkey in two bomb attacks attributed to the rebels of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (AFP), was it said Wednesday the Turkish security services.
The first attack targeted a police vehicle traveling in the night from Tuesday to Wednesday in the center of the town of Nusaybin. Three policemen were killed and one seriously injured, told AFP an official of the forces

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Dyarbakir, Killed, Kurdish, policemen, Turkey

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