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Kamikaze
Kamikaze
Registered Member
Posts : 1463
Join Date : 2011-09-11
Location : Ireland

Airstrike on Turkey-Iraq border kills 35 people Empty Airstrike on Turkey-Iraq border kills 35 people

Thu 29 Dec 2011 - 23:01
A Turkish airstrike on the border with Iraq killed 35 people who are
now thought to have been smuggling cigarettes, a senior Turkish
lawmaker said Thursday.
Turkish air force jets launched the strike late Wednesday after
unmanned aerial vehicles showed a group moving from Iraq toward the
border with Turkey in an area "mostly used by terrorists," a statement
from the military general staff said.

But a senior member of Turkey's governing Justice and Development
Party (AKP) said early indications are that those identified by the
drones and subsequently killed were civilians.

"These people were thought to be terrorists; however, the first
initial investigative information we have from the local authorities,
especially from Sirnak Governor's office, indicate that these people are
involved in cigarette smuggling," said the AKP's deputy chairman and
spokesman Huseyin Celik.

He said the strike had killed many members of the same family.

"Even if there was a situation 100% that these people were smugglers,
these people should not have been subjected to this, they should not
have been bombed. It is out of question," he said.

Expressing his condolences to the affected families, he vowed that a
full investigation would be carried out and no cover-up would be
allowed.

A local official in Turkey's southeastern province of Sirnak earlier
said the airstrike had killed at least 31 Kurdish villagers.

"A group of villagers were coming from northern Iraq across the
border after 9:30 p.m. Their path was blocked by soldiers and then four
planes bombed them," said the official, Yunus Urek of the pro-Kurdish
Peace and Democracy Party.

The incident occurred in a region where there is a large Kurdish
population. The people were from the border villages of Ortasu and
Gulyazi, according to Urek, who said he was in Ortasu.

Urek said the victims frequently cross the border "for their daily
needs like sugar or fuel." He said one person survived the strike.

Turkish authorities said an administrative and legal investigation was under way.

"Since the area where the group was located was often used by
terrorists and a movement towards our border was determined, it was
evaluated that the area should be held under fire by air force planes,"
the Turkish military said in a statement released Thursday.

The military statement claimed the the strike was in the
Sinat-Haftanin area of northern Iraq, where many militant training camps
are situated and there are no civilian settlements.

Vahdettin Ozkan, the governor of Turkey's southeastern province of Sirnak, also said a full investigation is under way.

"A crisis center has been set up at the governor's office, and
prosecutors and security forces have been sent to the region," he told
Turkey's Anadolu news agency.

Some observers have sounded the alarm in recent months about
escalating tension between Turkey and its Kurdish minority, warning it
may reignite a conflict that has simmered since 1984 and claimed more
than 30,000 lives.

Turkey has been going on the offensive against Kurdish separatists
based across its border in northern Iraq with bombings and incursions.

In October, an attack killed 24 Turkish soldiers in the southeastern
section of the country, where Turkey borders Iraq. The Turkish
government blamed terrorists for that attack, and the United States
pinned responsibility for the attack on militants from a Kurdish
separatist group, the Kurdistan Workers Party, or PKK.

Earlier this month, Turkish police detained dozens of people in a wave of raids focused on pro-Kurdish media organizations.

The Kurds represent the largest ethnic minority in Turkey. For
decades, they were the target of repressive government policies,
implemented by officials who sometimes referred to them as "mountain
Turks."


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