ANKARA (Reuters) - Condemned Kurdish rebel leader Abdullah Ocalan has
threatened that
fighting between separatist Kurdish guerrillas and Turkish troops in
northern Iraq could
spread to Turkey, his lawyers said on Friday.
``We don't want war but if they come to us with the aim of extermination,
we will use our
legitimate right to self-defense, which is a universal right,'' the
imprisoned Ocalan was
quoted as saying in a statement faxed to Reuters.
Turkey maintains troops in northern Iraq, out of Baghdad's control since
the end of the 1991
Gulf War, but denies reports ithas recently sent reinforcements to
fight some 5,000 Turkish
Kurdish rebels it says are in the region.
But Turkey has said it offers technical support to two Iraqi Kurdish
factions, Jalal Talabani's
Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) and Massoud Barzani's Kurdistan
Democratic Party
(KDP), which administer the breakaway Kurdish enclave.
``The latest developments in the south (northern Iraq) have both increased
the risk of war
and brought the possibility of that spreading into the whole area including
the north
(southeastern Turkey),'' Ocalan's statement said.
Ocalan's Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) has waged an armed campaign
for
self-rule since 1984 in which more than 30,000 people have died in
southeastern Turkey.
But clashes between the PKK and Turkish security forces have been reduced
to sporadic
skirmishes since Ocalan ordered his fighters to withdraw from Turkey
last year after he was
sentenced to death for treason in 1999.
He has urged the PKK instead to seek broad cultural rights through political means.
Rival Kurds Meet In Iraq
The PUK and KDP, erstwhile rivals, have maintained an uneasy peace in
northern Iraq since
a cease-fire agreement brokered by the United States and signed in
1998. That agreement
also called for them to unite against the PKK and prevent it from setting
up bases in the
region.
A KDP spokesman on Friday told Reuters KDP officials had met Talabani
of the PUK in
Sulaymaniyah in northern Iraq last week.
``They discussed the points in the Washington agreement that are still
problems,'' the
spokesman said.
He declined to say whether the Iraqi Kurdish leaders had discussed the
PKK's presence in the
breakaway region.
``All major issues between the two parties were discussed,'' he added.
Talabani visited Ankara earlier this month to discuss cooperation with
Turkey and to ask for
economic aid.
``What Talabani and Barzani should do is not provoke war, but mediate
between Turkey
and the PKK to find a democratic solution to the Kurdish problem,''
Ocalan said in the
statement.
Turkey rejects Ocalan's peace overtures as a ruse to save his own life
and vows to
``neutralize'' the guerrilla movement.
Ocalan is being held on death row on an island prison in the Sea of
Marmara where he is the
only prisoner.
Turkey has said it will not carry out the death sentence while the European
Court of Human
Rights continues hearing an appeal by lodged by Ocalan.
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The
Kurdistan Observer
www.kurdistanobserver.com