ANKARA, Jan 7 (AFP) Turkish Prime Minister Bulent Ecevit
confirmed Sunday that
Turkish soldiers had crossed into northern Iraq to aid the two
leading Kurdish factions in the
area in their struggle against armed Kurdish rebels from Turkey.
Ecevit told the state-run TRT channel in a live interview that
Turkish soldiers were providing
"technical help" to the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) and
the Kurdistan Democratic Party
(KDP) to fight the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK).
"The real struggle in the region is between the PUK and the PKK," Ecevit said.
"The PUK and the KDP are spearheading the combat against the PKK
and we are trying to help
them," he added.
For the past few months, the Jalal Talabani-led PUK, which controls
a section of northern Iraq
close to the border with Iran, has been fighting PKK rebels which
it accuses of attacking its
positions in a deliberate attempt to destabilize the Kurdish-held
enclave.
The fighting comes after a long period of good relations between
the PUK and the PKK, which
has waged a 15-year armed campaign against Turkey for Kurdish
self-rule in the country's
southeast.
The PKK has been trying to find itself a safe haven since September
1999 when the group said
it would stop fighting Ankara and withdraw from Turkish territory
to seek a peaceful resolution to
the conflict.
Most of the rebels are believed to have crossed into northern
Iraq, which has been outside
Baghdad's control since the 1991 Gulf War.
The KDP, led by Massoud Barzani, controls the strip of land near
the Turkish border and often
helps Turkey in its frequent cross-border operations in the region.
Ecevit did not say how many troops were taking part in the incursion
or when it would end, but
underlined that the clashes in northern Iraq was evidence that
the "terrorist PKK was still in
existence".
"The terrorists are armed and are just beyond our border. In other
words, they are lying in
ambush," Ecevit told TRT.
"We are taking the necessary measures, both in Turkey and abroad,
against separatist
terrorism in the framework of international legal rules," he
added.
The powerful Turkish military has already played down the PKK's
truce pledges as a "ploy" and
has called on the rebels to either surrender or face the army.
While there has been no official statement on the size of Turkey's
current cross-border
operation, Turkish newspapers have reported that some 10,000
troops have penetrated deep into
the mountains of northern Iraq.
But Turkish general staff denied the reports Sunday as being far from the truth.
The Turkish army regularly launches operations against the PKK
in the north of Iraq which it
says the rebels use as a springboard for attacks against Turkey.
The incursions draw strong criticism from Baghdad, which accuses
Ankara of violating its
territorial integrity.
On Tuesday, Iraqi Foreign Minister Mohamed Said al-Sahhaf called
on the Arab League to
intervene and ensure the "immediate withdrawal" of Turkish troops.
"The continuation of Turkish aggression against Iraqi territory
represents a flagrant violation of
Iraqi sovereignty," Sahhaf said in a message to the league's
Secretary General Esmat Abel
Meguid.
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The
Kurdistan Observer
www.kurdistanobserver.com