Sunday 25 December 2022

Turkey Accuses France of Backing PKK as Kurds 'Burning Streets of Paris

Turkey Accuses France of Backing PKK as Kurds 'Burning Streets of Paris

Erdogan Aide Blames Paris Unrest After Shooting on PKK 




Participants wearing jerseys with the face of Abdullah Ocalan, leader of the Kurdistan Worker's Party (PKK), gather to take part in a tribute to the three persons killed, in front of the 'Centre democratique du Kurdistan' in Paris, Dec. 24, 2022.






On Saturday, scores of Kurdish activists clashed with police in Paris as they protested the killing of three Kurds in a shooting spree in the heart of the French capital.







The Turkish President's spokesman Ibrahim Kalin has accused France of backing the Kurdistan Workers' Party* (PKK) in Syria, an organization which he said is now setting Parisian streets on fire.


"This is PKK in France. The same terrorist organization you support in Syria," Kalin tweeted, referring to French authorities.


He then referred to the PKK as "the same organization that has killed thousands of Turks, Kurds and security forces over the last 40 years."




"Now they are burning the streets of Paris. Will you still remain silent?" he added.


A 19-second clip attached to the tweet shows a demolished car on fire and a group of what look like Kurdish protesters clashing with police forces in the French capital.







A 19-second clip attached to the tweet shows a demolished car on fire and a group of what look like Kurdish protesters clashing with police forces in the French capital.


Kalin's remarks came after Paris police chief Laurent Nunez told reporters on Saturday that at least eleven Kurdish activists were detained during protests staged by Kurds in the center of the French capital. The unrest was prompted by a shooting rampage near the Paris-based Kurdish cultural center on Friday.


In a separate development, the Paris prosecutor's office said that the shooter, who opened fire near the Kurdish center in Paris, killing three Kurdish activists and wounding three more on Friday, had been transferred to a psychiatric infirmary.


The 69-year-old, reportedly a Frenchman with a record of two assassination attempts in 2016 and 2021, earlier told police that he attacked the Kurdish community out of racial hatred. The prosecutor's office said it was investigating the attack as deliberate murder.







The Turkish government has been combating the PKK, which seeks to create a Kurdish autonomous region in Turkey, since the early 1980s. The PKK and Ankara signed a ceasefire agreement in 2013, but it collapsed just two years later over several terrorist attacks, which Turkey blamed on the Kurds. Since 2016, the Turkish armed forces have been conducting air and ground operations against allegedly PKK-aligned militants in Syria and Iraq.



Who are Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) rebels



The Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) has been a thorn in Turkey's side for decades.


The group, which has Marxist-Leninist roots, was formed in the late 1970s and launched an armed struggle against the Turkish government in 1984, calling for an independent Kurdish state within Turkey.


Fighting flared up again after a two-year-old ceasefire ended in July 2015.


Now the PKK is being targeted in a bigger Turkish security crackdown, following the botched July 2016 coup attempt against President Recep Tayyip Erdogan by mutinous Turkish officers.









What are the PKK's ambitions in Turkey?



In a BBC interview in April, 2016, the PKK's military leader Cemil Bayik said "we don't want to separate from Turkey and set up a state".


"We want to live within the borders of Turkey on our own land freely... The struggle will continue until the Kurds' innate rights are accepted," he said.


Turkey continues to accuse the PKK of "trying to create a separate state in Turkey".


More than 40,000 people have died in the conflict. It reached a peak in the mid-1990s, when thousands of villages were destroyed in the largely Kurdish south-east and east of Turkey. Hundreds of thousands of Kurds fled to cities in other parts of the country.


In the 1990s, the PKK rolled back on its demands for an independent state, calling instead for more autonomy for the Kurds.



Who are the Kurds?



The spotlight is now on Turkey's pro-Kurdish opposition party, People's Democracy (HDP), whose joint leaders Selahattin Demirtas and Figen Yuksekdag were arrested early on 4 November.


The Turkish government said they had failed to appear for questioning about alleged links to the PKK - which they deny. Turkey accuses them of spreading PKK propaganda. Ten other MPs were also arrested.


Acting with emergency powers, introduced after the coup attempt, the Turkish authorities have also detained the joint mayors of Diyarbakir, a mainly Kurdish city. The Kurds' main media outlets have also been shut down.


The HDP, the main pro-Kurdish party, is a broad coalition of groups including liberal and left-wing ethnic Turks. The party denies Turkey's claim that it is allied to the PKK.


It entered parliament for the first time last year, winning 59 seats, making it the second-biggest opposition party.



What is happening in the Turkey-PKK conflict?



South-eastern Turkey has been wracked by violence since the ceasefire with the PKK collapsed.


Hours after the HDP politicians were arrested, a car bomb went off outside a police station in Diyarbakir. Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim said it had killed eight people, including two policemen - and he blamed the PKK.


The Turkish air force regularly carries out air strikes against PKK bases in mountainous northern Iraq.


The Turkish government has ruled out any negotiations until the group completely disarms.




There have been many PKK attacks on Turkish security forces in the south-east.


In August 2016 a PKK car bomb in Cizre killed 11 policemen and injured 78. Hundreds of people have died in more than a year of clashes in Turkey's Kurdish-majority region.


The PKK is listed as a terrorist organisation by Turkey, the EU and US.


Human rights groups say many civilians have died during Turkey's anti-PKK offensive in the south-east. Turkey has imposed curfews and used heavy armour in urban areas in its fight with the rebels.


Tears and destruction amid Turkey PKK crackdown


Cizre is among the places worst-hit by Turkey-PKK clashes


What about the fighting in Iraq and Syria?



Turkey has twin concerns about the Iraqi-Kurdish push to oust so-called Islamic State (IS) from Mosul.


President Erdogan's AK Party, strongly rooted in Sunni Islam, does not want Iraqi Shia forces to spread their influence up to Turkey's borders and beyond.


Nor does Turkey want the armed Kurdish groups to join up along its borders, bolstering the PKK cause.


Turkey retains an army base at Bashiqa, not far from Mosul, and has trained a local militia force - the Ninevah Guards - consisting of Sunni Arabs, Turkmens and Kurds.


In August 2016 Turkish troops helped a Syrian militia to push IS jihadists out of Jarabulus, a border town


In war-torn Syria, Turkey views the Popular Protection Units (YPG) - a Kurdish force fighting IS - as linked to the PKK.


Turkey is allied to the US in Nato - but the US also supports the YPG in its anti-IS struggle.


In July 2015, a suicide bombing blamed on IS killed 32 people in the mainly Kurdish town of Suruc, just inside Turkey, near war-ravaged Kobane in Syria.


Kurdish groups accused the Turkish government of not doing enough to thwart IS operations.


A Turkish military operation in August-September 2016, in support of allied Syrian rebels, ousted IS from border towns.



Are there any peace initiatives?



The PKK suffered a major blow in 1999 when its leader, Abdullah Ocalan, was arrested and jailed for treason.


In March 2013, he called a ceasefire and urged PKK forces to withdraw from Turkey. But that ceasefire broke down in July 2015.


PKK leader holds key to Turkish-Kurdish peace.


Abdullah Ocalan - seen here in 1993 - was kidnapped by Turkish commandos in Kenya in 1999


It was not the first time a truce had been declared.


Shortly after Ocalan's arrest, the PKK introduced a five-year unilateral ceasefire and tried to change its image and widen its appeal.


It called for a role in Turkey's politics, more cultural rights for the country's estimated 15 million Kurds and the release of imprisoned PKK members.


Turkey refused to negotiate with it and offered only a limited amnesty to its members.


Between 2009 and 2011, high-level secret talks took place between the PKK and the Turkish government in Oslo, Norway, but they collapsed after a clash in June 2011, in which 14 Turkish soldiers were killed.


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