Turkey said on
Saturday that its fighter jets hit militant camps of the Kurdistan
Workers Party (PKK) in northern Iraq overnight, and Turkish ground
forces struck the PKK and Islamic State fighters in northern Syria. The strikes against PKK targets are likely to be a major blow to the stalled Kurdish peace process. Turkey
launched its first-ever air attack against Islamic State targets in
Syria early on Friday, promising more decisive action against both the
jihadists and Kurdish militants. Fighter
jets hit PKK targets in several locations in northern Iraq, including
warehouses, "logistic points", living quarters and storage buildings,
Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu's office said. The
outlawed PKK, deemed a terrorist organization by Ankara and Washington,
has waged a three-decade insurgency against Turkey for greater Kurdish
autonomy. Turkey
stepped up its role in the U.S.-led coalition against the militant
group Islamic State on Friday. As well as launching its first air
strikes against the hardliners in Syria, it promised to open up its air
bases to the United States. Police
also detained more than 300 suspected Islamic State and PKK members in a
police crack down on Friday, Prime Minister Davutoglu said after vowing
to fight all "terrorist groups" equally. Turkey's
more active role comes after a suspected Islamic State suicide bomber
killed 32 people, some of them Kurds, this week in the border town of
Suruc. That touched off a wave of violence in the mainly Kurdish
southeast, with the PKK killing at least two police officers, calling it
retaliation for the suicide bombing. Many
Kurds and opposition supporters have suspected Turkish President Tayyip
Erdogan and the ruling AK Party of covertly backing Islamic State
against Kurdish fighters in Syria, something the government has
repeatedly denied. Erdogan
took a big political risk in starting peace talks in 2012 with the
Kurds, who represent nearly 20 percent of Turkey's population, but they
now blame him for backtracking on promises. On
Friday, Erdogan said he had told U.S. President Barack Obama that the
PKK, which he calls a separatist organization, would be a focus for
attacks.
Turkey hits Kurdish militant camps in northern Iraq
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