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Turkey troops try to break Kurdish siege

Published: 05 Jun 2014 - 07:15 am | Last Updated: 25 Jan 2022 - 10:39 pm

DIYARBAKIR, Turkey: Turkish security forces fired tear gas and water cannon in dawn operations yesterday against Kurdish demonstrators blocking highways in southeast Turkey, in an effort to end protests which have spread across the region over the last 12 days.
The unrest presents a challenge for Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who hopes to win Kurdish support for his expected bid for Turkey’s presidency in an August election.
The protests also highlight the fragility of peace talks launched by Erdogan in 2012 with jailed Kurdish rebel leader Abdullah Ocalan that aim to end a 30-year-old insurgency which has killed an estimated 40,000 people.
In the Lice district of Diyarbakir province, dozens of protesters hurled petrol bombs, fireworks and stones in response to the gendarmerie police intervention, security sources said.
The protests, in which the youth wing of Ocalan’s Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) has played a prominent role, are aimed at halting the construction of military outposts to tighten security and have spread to other provinces in recent days.
In the province of Mus, helicopters set down soldiers and special forces teams to back up another early morning operation against some 1,000 demonstrators who clashed with security forces there.
Local villagers joined the protest, setting up makeshift barricades and throwing stones at armoured vehicles travelling through, security sources said.
Despite the unrest, the government and pro-Kurdish politicians said this week the peace talks were advancing.
Ocalan himself said the process had reached a new stage. The PKK is designated a terrorist group by Ankara, the United States and the European Union and Ocalan remains widely reviled among Turks.
Erdogan, who has invested significant political capital in the peace efforts, faces a hard balancing act to win the backing of Kurdish voters for his presidency bid without scaring away nationalist-minded Turks who loathe Ocalan and remain highly sceptical of the Kurds’ push for more autonomy.
He would need a simple majority to win in the first round of the August presidential election. His ruling AK Party secured support of around 43 percent nationwide in municipal elections at the end of March, suggesting every vote will count. A ceasefire called by Ocalan in March 2013 has largely held, but the PKK halted a rebel withdrawal to bases in northern Iraq last summer, complaining about the slow pace of negotiations.
They have increased their activity in recent months with kidnappings and acts of sabotage.
There were no immediate indications that yesterday’s security operations had brought an end to the protests, in which the demonstrators have set up roadblocks and have dug trenches to close country roads between the 
provinces. REUTERS