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Kurdish asylum seekers on hunger strike in Poland
by AFP Staff Writers
Warsaw (AFP) May 27, 2022

Turkish soldier killed in northern Iraq
Istanbul (AFP) May 29, 2022 - Another Turkish soldier has been killed during a military operation against Kurdish militants in the north of Iraq, Turkey's defence ministry said Sunday.

The soldier was killed on Saturday when an explosive device went off as he and another soldiers were passing near it.

That brings to seven the number of Turkish troops killed in the region since Tuesday.

Turkey has launched several operations in the area against fighters from the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), which Ankara and its Western allies say is a terrorist organisation.

The PKK has training camps and bases in autonomous Iraqi Kurdistan and has been waging an insurgency against the Turkish state since 1984, a conflict that has killed 40,000 people, many of them civilians.

Ankara has launched a series of operations against PKK fighters in Iraq and Syria, the latest one in northern Iraq beginning in April.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on Monday that Turkey would soon launch a new military operation into northern Syria which he said was designed to create a 30-kilometre (19-mile) "security zone" along their border.

Ten Kurdish asylum seekers in Poland on Friday entered their third week of a hunger strike to protest what they described as prison-like conditions and a slow immigration process.

"The strike began on May 4," said Dagmara Bielec, a spokeswoman for the Polish border guard.

She added that the six Iraqis and four Turks have requested asylum and are staying at a immigration holding centre in Lesznowola, near the capital Warsaw.

A spokesman for the hunger strikers told AFP that nine of them had arrived via the border with Belarus and had now spent several months "confined" to the centre.

Speaking on condition of anonymity, the man described the strikers as "very weak, with some of them having begun to refuse beverages too".

The asylum seekers are protesting the conditions of their confinement, including the food, limited telephone and Internet access and difficulties contacting lawyers.

Since last year, thousands of migrants and refugees -- mostly from the Middle East -- have come knocking at the EU member's door via its border with Belarus.

Poland has accused the Belarusian regime of orchestrating the influx and has responded with the construction of a barbed wire fence and alleged pushbacks.

Rights activists have condemned the strict approach, pointing to the fact that Poland has simultaneously been welcoming Ukrainian war refugees with open arms.

Bielec said "staff at the centre have continued to speak to the strikers about their conditions and legal situation, notably trying to convince them to abandon the hunger strike... but to no avail."

As Sweden woos Turkey, fears mount over what it will cede
Stockholm (AFP) May 27, 2022 - Sweden hopes to strike a compromise with Turkey to seal its NATO membership bid, but fears are mounting in the Scandinavian country that the government may sacrifice too much to get what it wants.

"If you want to sell everything for NATO membership, then go ahead but I think it's awful", blasted Amineh Kakabaveh, a Swedish lawmaker of Iranian Kurdish origin.

"It's awful that everything depends on NATO membership, rushing it through and undermining democracy," she told AFP in an interview.

A former Left Party member sitting in parliament as an independent since 2019, she played a pivotal role in the election of Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson in November 2021, providing the decisive vote in parliament.

Like Kakabaveh, other prominent Swedes have in recent weeks urged the government not to cave in to Turkey's demands.

"Let's not fall into Erdogan's trap", argued an op-ed signed by 17 cultural and literary figures in Swedish daily Dagens Nyheter this week, referring to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Any NATO membership deal must be unanimously approved by all 30 members of the alliance.

But Turkey has refused to agree to the opening of negotiations with Stockholm.

Among other things Ankara accuses it of providing a safe haven for the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), listed as a "terrorist" group by Turkey and its Western allies.

Turkey on Monday published a list of five demands for Sweden, including the extradition of people Ankara considers "terrorists" for having links to the PKK and its allies in Syria, the People's Protection Units (YPG).

- 'Widespread support for Kurdish cause'-

According to Turkish media, other people on the list include journalists whom Ankara accuses of having ties to Fethullah Gulen, the US-based preacher wanted over a failed 2016 coup in Turkey.

Two of them, Abdullah Bozkurt and Levent Kenez, said that finding themselves caught in a power struggle between Ankara and Stockholm "didn't come as a surprise".

"We were actually joking a month before Sweden decided to apply for membership in NATO. We said 'If they do, our names are perhaps going to come up on the bargaining table'. And that is exactly what happened," Bozkurt told AFP.

The pair, who started the news site Nordic Monitor, are convinced their lives would be in danger if they were extradited to Turkey.

They said they were confident the Swedish judiciary would not bow to pressure and would continue to reject Ankara's demands for their extradition.

But they did express concern about their safety in Sweden.

Bozkurt was attacked by three masked men in 2020. A police investigation is still ongoing.

Kenez said "the biggest risk" was that pro-government media outlets publish their pictures "and that endangers our security here."

Sweden and Turkey began diplomatic talks in Ankara on Wednesday.

The two countries have had thorny ties for years, with the Kurdish question one of their main bones of contention.

While Sweden was one of the first countries to recognise the PKK as a terrorist organisation in the 1980s, there is "political and widespread popular support for 'the Kurdish cause', including parliamentarians on both sides of the aisle", said Paul Levin, head of the Institute for Turkey Studies at Stockholm University.

- Moment of truth -

The Scandinavian country has welcomed around 100,000 Kurds from Turkey, Iran and Iraq since the 1970s.

"A lot of Kurds see Sweden as a second home," said Linnaeus University researcher Barzoo Eliassi, an expert on the diaspora.

Sweden has been governed by the Social Democrats for the better part of the post-war period and has been strongly influenced by the party's fight for international solidarity.

It has historically provided a safe haven for dissidents and those fleeing oppression, in addition to championing issues like human rights and feminism.

Now, it finds itself faced with 'realpolitik'.

Eliassi said the negotiations with Turkey will show "Sweden's real face" and will reveal "what is negotiable and what is non-negotiable".

One of the sticking points is sure to be the YPG in Syria.

Ankara views the YPG, which fought against the Islamic State group in Syria with Western support, as the PKK's Syria offshoot.

Having applied to NATO to protect itself from Russian aggression, Sweden now has to contend with another strong power -- just four months ahead of a general election.

"If they give in even before joining NATO, I think it will be counterproductive and it will undermine the very reason that they wanted to join the alliance in the first place", said Bozkurt.


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THE STANS
Xi speaks with UN rights chief as Xinjiang row rages
Beijing (AFP) May 25, 2022
Chinese President Xi Jinping held a video call with UN rights chief Michelle Bachelet on Wednesday, as she visits Xinjiang during a mission overshadowed by fresh allegations of Uyghur abuses and fears she is being used as a public relations tool. China's Communist Party is accused of detaining over one million Uyghurs and other Muslim minorities in the far-western region as part of a years-long crackdown the United States and lawmakers in other Western countries have labelled a "genocide". Bache ... read more

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