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TERROR WARS
Kurdish PKK fighters called back to Turkey after protests
by Staff Writers
Istanbul (AFP) Oct 11, 2014


More than 20,000 Kurds protest against IS in Germany
Berlin (AFP) Oct 11, 2014 - More than 20,000 Kurds protested against the Islamic State group in the western German city of Duesseldorf Saturday, according to the police.

Kurdish organisations called the demonstration to protest attacks by IS jihadist militants on Kurdish towns in Syria, particularly the besiegement of the town of Kobane.

Meanwhile, two people were seriously hurt after radical Muslims attacked a Kurdish demonstration in the west Austrian city of Bregenz, according to a police spokesman.

The attack came after clashes between Kurds and radical Muslims in the northern German cities of Hamburg and Celle left more than 20 people injured earlier this week.

Concern has grown in Berlin about a spillover of the tensions in Syria and Iraq to Germany, which is home to an estimated one million ethnic Kurds.

"We're watching this very closely," Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere said in an interview to appear Sunday in German daily Focus.

Those who take part in fighting "should expect a very tough reaction," he warned.

Meanwhile, between five and six thousand people -- according to police and demonstrators respectively -- protested Saturday in Paris to call for international support for Kurds trapped in Kobane.

Around 600 people also protested in the eastern French city of Mulhouse, several hundred in the east-central city of Lyon, as well as several hundred in the southwestern city of Bordeaux.

Two wounded in clash at Kurdish demo in Austria
Vienna (AFP) Oct 11, 2014 - Two people were seriously wounded Saturday as a Kurdish demonstration was attacked by radical Muslims in the western Austrian city of Bregenz, police said, days after clashes in neighbouring Germany left 23 injured.

The two men were rushed to hospital with stab wounds in the stomach and one was in critical condition, a police spokesman said.

A few hundred Kurds marched through Bregenz Saturday afternoon to show support for Kurdish fighters defending the Syrian city of Kobane on the Turkish border, currently besieged by the jihadist group Islamic State (IS).

Following the stabbing incident, the march had to proceed under a massive police presence.

On Friday, a pro-Kurdish demonstration in Vienna with several thousand protesters passed off peacefully.

In neighbouring Germany, at least 23 people were hurt this week in violent clashes between Kurds and radical Muslims.

A leader of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) warned on Saturday it had called all its fighters back to Turkey and could resume attacks, after protests over the government's policy on Syria left dozens dead.

Cemil Bayik, one of the founders of the PKK which has waged a bloody 30-year insurgency for Kurdish self-rule in Turkey, said the peace process with Ankara was in danger of collapse after the deadly unrest.

"We have warned Turkey. If the state carries on like this then the guerrillas will resume the war of defence in order to protect the people," Bayik told German broadcaster ARD in an interview recorded in Iraq.

As part of a fragile peace process, the PKK had started withdrawing its fighters from Turkey and moving them to its military base in northern Iraq.

But Bayik said these fighters had now returned to Turkey in reaction to the policies of the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP).

"Because Turkey has continued its policies without changes, we have sent back all the fighters who were withdrawn," he said.

He did not reveal how many fighters had left the base at Mount Kandil in northern Iraq to return to Turkey. The size of the PKK's total fighting force is estimated at around 5,000.

Kurds are furious that Turkey has not intervened to defend the mainly Kurdish Syrian border town of Kobane from Islamic State (IS) jihadists.

Moreover, Turkey has actively prevented Kurds from crossing into Syria to join the fight against IS because it fears it would lead to the creation of an effective Kurdish fighting force at its border.

The anger boiled over into violent protests across Turkey last week that according to official figures left 31 dead and 360 wounded.

"The AKP is responsible for what is going on in Kobane and Turkey," Bayik told ARD.

- 'Declaration of war' -

The PKK's overall leader Abdullah Ocalan, who is serving a life sentence in an island prison on the sea of Marmara, has given the government until mid-October to come up with a roadmap to save the peace process.

But President Recep Tayyip Erdogan vowed Saturday to do everything possible to save the peace process, denouncing those who he said wanted to sabotage the search for a deal.

"Everyone must know that the acts of violence, vandalism and pillaging that we saw in the last days have nothing to do with Kobane," Erdogan said in a televised speech in the Black Sea town of Rize.

The Turkish government earlier this month obtained authorisation from parliament for military action in Iraq and Syria but Bayik claimed this was aimed more against the PKK than IS.

"The IS terror militia is barely mentioned in this authorisation (for military action)." he said. "But the PKK is very much mentioned.

"With the passing (of the authorisation) in parliament, Turkey ended the peace process and it amounts to a declaration of war," he said.

However, Bayik's rhetoric is considerably sharper than that of Ocalan, whom Kurds regard as having the final word on the peace process.

New demonstrations took place overnight in Turkey's largest Kurdish city of Diyarbakir but protests appear to have calmed somewhat, for now, after four days of bloody violence.

The world's largest stateless people, Kurds are spread between Iran, Iraq, Syria and Turkey and make up around 15-20 percent of the Turkish population.

The PKK has fought the Turkish authorities since 1984 in a rebellion that has claimed 40,000 lives. It has largely observed a ceasefire since March last year but peace talks are currently frozen.

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