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Talabani suggests 'general amnesty' for
PKK
26.10.2005
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ANKARA, Oct 24 (AFP) - Iraqi President Jalal
Talabani, in an interview published here Monday,
suggested a "general amnesty" by Ankara for Turkey's
Kurdish PKK rebels to end fighting in southwest
Turkey.
"It is possible to bring down the PKK from the
mountains if there is a general amnesty in Turkey,"
Talabani, himself a Kurd, told English-language
daily The New Anatolian.
"It will also be helpful if there is some kind of
cooperation between Turkey, the Iraqi government,
the PUK and the KDP over the issue," he said.
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Iraqi
President : Jalal Talabani
Photo: Reuters
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Talabani was referring to the two main Kurdish
factions that share power in Northern Iraq, his own
Patriotic Union of Kurdistan and Maossud Barzani's
Kurdistan Democratic Party.
"It will be impossible to solve the issue by using
force," Talabani said, adding: "The Iraqi army is
not yet able to do this.
"If we push the PKK too far, perhaps they will start
cooperating with terrorists in Iraq like Al-Qaeda,
Ansar El-Islam and (Abu Musab al-) Zarqawi and will
bring more trouble to all of us," he said.
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan warned
last week that Turkey was running out of patience
with the PKK, which uses bases in Northern Iraq to
attack targets on Turkish territory.
He called on the United States and Iraq to take
action against the PKK, or Kurdistan Worker's Party,
which has waged an on-and-off war against security
forces in Turkey's Kurdish-majority southeast that
has claimed 37,000 lives since 1984.
Ankara has threatened several times to launch
military incursions into Northern Iraq to dislodge
PKK militants holed up there since 1989.
The PKK, considered a terrorist organization by
Turkey, the European Union and the United States,
has increased its attacks since last spring, one
year after ending a five-year unilateral truce it
proclaimed after the arrest of its leader, Abdullah
Ocalan.
Turkey has announced several partial amnesties in
the past for PKK militants in a bid to end the
fighting, but has always excluded the movement's
leadership.
AFP
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