Kurdish conflict escalates in Turkey

— Turkey’s war with Kurdish militants has entered its bloodiest phase in more than a decade, with attacks on soldiers and police almost daily and a breakdown in ties with neighbors that had helped to contain the threat.

On Tuesday, a military convoy in the largely Kurdish southeast was ambushed, leaving 10 dead. Two days earlier, eight police were killed when a mine blew up their minibus, and the day before four soldiers died in a similar blast. On Thursday, police were trying to defuse a bomb under a bridge near the airport in Diyarbakir, the largest city in the southeast, the state-run Anatolia agency reported.

The army has killed 500 members of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, or PKK, since February, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said this week.

Turkey’s fraying ties with Syria, Iran and Iraq, neighbors with their own Kurdish minorities that have collaborated against the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, offer new openings for the group. Erdogan, who had vowed to end the Kurdish conflict, now risks presiding over an escalation that could undermine the $800 billion economy and encourage a backlash by Turkish nationalists.

“It certainly is the broadest PKK challenge since the late 1980s,” said Michael Rubin, a Middle East scholar at the American Enterprise Institute. “With events in Syria, Iraqi Kurdistan’s growing wealth, and tension between Iran and Turkey, there has never been a better time for the PKK to stake its claim.”

The Kurdish conflict has killed almost 40,000 people over three decades and cost more than $300 billion, according to official estimates. Fighting peaked in the first half of the 1990s and eased after the capture in 1999 of Kurdistan Workers’ Party leader Abdullah Ocalan, now in solitary confinement in a Turkish prison.

SYRIAN RELATIONS FRAYED

Turkey’s relations with Syria have been hostile since Erdogan backed the rebels fighting President Bashar Assad, allowing some to shelter on Turkish soil. A Turkish plane crashed into the east Mediterranean in June after it was fired on from Syria.

The collapse of ties gave Kurdish militants more freedom to operate over a 566-mile border where Turkey and Syria had previously staged joint exercises.

When Assad’s troops withdrew from parts of north Syria in July, Kurdish groups seized control of several towns. Front-page stories in Turkish newspapers said that the area was being administered by the Kurdistan Workers’ Party. Those reports were exaggerated, Deputy Prime Minister Besir Atalay said in an interview last week.

After a car bomb killed nine people in the southern city of Gaziantep last month, government ministers raised the possibility that Syria may have collaborated with the Kurdistan Workers’ Party in the attack.

The Syrian conflict has hurt Turkey’s ties with Iran, an Assad ally. Turkey’s friendship with Iraq has been strained by the presence in Istanbul of fugitive Vice President Tariq al-Hashimi, sentenced to death in his homeland over allegations he ran death squads, and made welcome in Turkey. Kurds control northern Iraq and account for much of the population in nearby parts of Syria and Iran.

Nine Turkish citizens were arrested last month on charges of working for Iranian intelligence, Today’s Zaman newspaper reported on Sept. 7. The suspects were also accused of relaying positions of Turkish forces to the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, the newspaper reported, citing security forces.

Erdogan, speaking Monday in the western city of Denizli, said Turkish security forces would only halt operations if the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, classified as a terrorist organization by the United States and the European Union, lays down its weapons. He promised to pursue economic growth at the same time as “fighting the bloody handed terrorist organization.”

Kurdish politicians supportive of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party argue that there can only be progress if the Turkish army also halts operations.

“Both sides should pull their fingers from the trigger without any conditions,” Selahattin Demirtas, co-leader of the legal Kurdish Peace and Democracy Party, said this week. “If they can do that then we can build a new negotiation process.”

His party also calls for Ocalan’s release so that he can join in peace talks. The Kurdistan Workers’ Party commander in the field, Murat Karayilan, said this week that “the time has come” for Ocalan’s freedom, and vowed to respond in kind to the Turkish army’s drive against the group, according to the Kurdish Firat news agency.

So far, the latest wave of violence hasn’t affected financial markets, because attacks were viewed as isolated incidents that would not threaten political stability, said Inan Demir, chief economist at Finansbank AS in Istanbul.

An escalation to the level of conflict seen in the 1990s would “threaten Turkey’s human capital,” Demir said. “Less importantly, but unmistakably, it would weigh on fiscal balances and jeopardize the public debt dynamics.”

TOUGHER LINE TAKEN

Erdogan’s government has invested $30 billion in the southeast, building hospitals, schools and airports, since taking power in November 2002, Atalay said at his Ankara office. He cited an airport project in Yuksekova, a town in the largely Kurdish region, as an example of the difficulties. “They are burning down construction machines, harassing the contractor there,” Atalay said.

An attack Sunday on a pipeline in the southeast briefly cut oil flow from northern Iraq, prompting the government to step up security, Energy Minister Taner Yildiz said. The Kurdistan Workers’ Party has targeted energy and construction workers, threatening investment in the region, which has Turkey’s lowest employment rates.

Earlier in his premiership, Erdogan raised expectations in the southeast by removing some restrictions on the Kurdish language in education and media, part of a promised “opening” to a group that accounts for as much as 20 percent of Turkey’s 75 million people.

In the past three years, the government has taken a tougher line.

About 8,000 people are under arrest on charges of belonging to the Kurdistan Workers’ Party’s urban arm, the Peace and Democracy Party’s Demirtas said this week.

The gove rnment has threatened to strip some of the party’s lawmakers of their parliamentary immunity so that they can be charged and jailed for being Kurdistan Workers’ Party supporters. One of them, Sebahat Tuncel, was sentenced to eight years and nine months in prison on Tuesday, though she won’t serve the sentence unless her immunity is lifted.

Information for this article was contributed from Ankara by Ali Berat Meric of Bloomberg News.

Front Section, Pages 6 on 09/21/2012

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