Air strikes, carried out by 14 F-16, F-4 fighter-bombers, hit camps, other installations run by PKK, killing 67 rebel fighters. | |||||
Middle East Online | |||||
ISTANBUL
(Turkey) - Turkey's air force bombarded Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK)
targets in northern Iraq this week, killing 67 rebel fighters, the
military said Saturday, the first such strikes in nearly a month.
The
air strikes, carried out by 14 F-16 and F-4 fighter-bombers, hit camps
and other installations run by the PKK, which is designated as a
terrorist organisation by Turkey and its Western allies, the military
said in a statement carried by local media.
It is the
first such operation against PKK bases in Iraq since February 18, when
the air force launched raids in retaliation for a suicide bombing in
Ankara that killed 29 people, which Turkey blamed on Kurdish rebels.
The
Ankara attack, which targeted a convoy of five buses carrying army
staff, was claimed by the Kurdistan Freedom Falcons (TAK), who have been
linked to the PKK.
Turkey has in recent months waged
an all-out assault on the PKK, which launched an insurgency against the
Turkish state in 1984, fighting for greater autonomy and rights for the
country's largest ethnic minority.
After more than two
years of ceasefire, deadly clashes restarted last year between security
forces and rebels in the Kurdish-dominated southeast.
Last
month Turkey carried out artillery bombardments on Kurdish fighters in
Syria and threatened to extend the action to include air strikes.
Turkey
targeted the People's Protection Units (YPG) militia, which it
considers to be a terror group linked to the PKK despite support for the
group from Ankara's ally Washington.
|
blog archive
Sunday, 13 March 2016
Turkey bombs PKK targets in northern Iraq
التسميات:
Middle-East-Online
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment