(Reuters) - A
Kurdish protester was shot dead and two others were wounded in
southeastern Turkey on Tuesday as they clashed with security forces
dismantling a newly erected statue of a prominent Kurdish militant. Soldiers backed by
military helicopters were removing the statue of Mahsum Korkmaz, the
first field commander of the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) militant
group, in the Lice district when they came under attack, the military
said. "Security forces
immediately responded after the group attacked them with rocket
launchers, rifles and hand-made explosives," it said in a statement,
estimating the number of protesters at up to 250. It said military vehicles and two helicopters were damaged by bullets during the unrest. A
court ordered the demolition of the statue after it was erected in a
cemetery last week to mark the 30th anniversary of the PKK's first armed
attack against Turkish forces, led by Korkmaz. Deputy
Prime Minister Besir Atalay said the statue and the protest at its
demolition had been an attempt to derail a two-year-old peace process
between the government and the PKK. "This
statue issue came out of the blue. Significant developments are taking
place in the peace process, and a statue pops up. This is a clear
provocation against the peace process," Atalay told NTV television. "What happened at the end is that we unfortunately lost one life," he said. The
Union of Kurdistan Communities (KCK), the Kurdish militants' umbrella
political group, issued a statement calling on the ruling AK Party to
"stop playing with fire and end its attack on Kurdish people." The PKK, considered a terrorist group by Turkey,
the European Union and the United States, waged a three-decade
insurgency to push for greater Kurdish rights, but hostilities have
largely died down since a March 2013 ceasefire. PKK guerrillas have meanwhile rushed to the assistance of Kurdish peshmerga fighters in northern Iraq,
battling the advance of Islamic State militants and finding themselves
on the same side as the United States, which has carried out air strikes
in support of the Kurdish forces. Jailed
PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan told pro-Kurdish lawmakers visiting him at
the weekend that his movement's war with the Turkish state was nearing
its end, while prime minister and president-elect Tayyip Erdogan has
made the Kurdish peace process one of his priorities. But
mutual suspicion still runs high in some parts of the southeast between
Kurdish communities and the security forces in what has effectively
been a militarised zone since the 1990s. The
head of a local office of Turkey's Human Rights Association (IHD), Raci
Bilici, identified the man who died in the clashes as Mehdi Taskin, 24,
and said he was shot in the head. One of the two wounded had four
bullet wounds, he said. Turkey
began peace talks with Ocalan in 2012, and last month parliament
approved a legal framework for the process for the first time, an
important step towards ending the insurgency. Erdogan
has staked considerable political capital in the peace efforts,
broadening cultural and language rights for Kurds at the risk of
alienating some of his own nationalist support. Kurds
account for around a fifth of Turkey's population and their backing
could boost Erdogan's chances of changing the constitution to strengthen
the powers of the presidency after he takes office at the end of the
month.
Kurd shot dead in clash over statue with Turkish force
Reuters
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