Turkey
warns Iraqi Kurds, complains to US
AFP
ANKARA
Petroleumworld.com
04 10 07
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan warned
the Iraqi Kurds on Monday that hostility toward his country could result in a "very
heavy cost" for them in the future.
His warning came after Massud Barzani, the head of the autonomous Kurdish region
in northern Iraq, reportedly threatened to interfere in Turkey's affairs if Ankara
continued to oppose Kurdish claims on the oil-rich city of Kirkuk.
" A northern Iraq which neighbours Turkey is gravely wrong in the way it
is currently acting and this could result in a very heavy cost for them afterwards," Erdogan
told reporters.
Barzani has "overstepped the line", he said. "I advise them not
to say words they cannot live up to and to know their place because they could
be later crushed under those words."
But an Iraqi Kurdish presidency official urged Turkey to keep out of plans to
settle the status of Kirkuk, which under the Iraqi constitution is scheduled
to be decided in a referendum before the year-end.
" Massud Barzani's statement about Turkey was in reaction to declarations
from the Turkish leadership and media against us and their threats to meddle" in
Iraqi Kurdish affairs, said Fuad Hussein, chief secretary of the presidency.
" We do not interfere in affairs of regional countries but also demand that
others should also not interfere in Kirkuk because it is an internal issue. It
belongs to Kurds, Turkmen and Arab and Assyrians," Hussein told reporters.
He said Iraqi Kurds considered the scheduled referendum the proper recourse to
solve the fate of Kirkuk, which sits atop a third of Iraq's oil wealth and would
cement economic independence for Iraqi Kurdistan.
" Threats are not part of our political vocabulary. Our language has always
been one of self defence. At the same time we do not accept others to use threats
against us," Hussein said.
The Turkish media quoted Barzani as saying at the weekend that Iraqi Kurds would
meddle in Turkey's already restive, predominantly-Kurdish southeast if Ankara
continued to oppose their ambitions to acquire Kirkuk.
Turkey says the referendum on Kirkuk's future status, scheduled to be held by
the year-end, should be postponed, arguing that thousands of Kurds have been
moved into the city to change its demography.
Tensions are already high between the two sides over Turkish accusations that
Iraqi Kurds tolerate, and even support, thousands of armed Turkish Kurd rebels
who have found refuge in the mountains of northern Iraq.
Turkish government spokesman Cemil Cicek said Ankara had handed Baghdad a diplomatic
note on Monday, stressing Iraqi pledges to eradicate the threat posed by the
separatist Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) militants hiding in northern Iraq.
" The source of the ethnic violence which claims lives in Turkey is Iraq.
Everybody knows this," he told reporters here after a cabinet meeting.
Ten members of the Turkish security forces were killed in clashes with PKK rebels
in Turkey's southeast at the weekend, in what was their heaviest losses in months.
Following Barzani's reported remarks, Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul also conveyed
Turkey's annoyance to US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice in a telephone conversation
at the weekend, a senior Turkish diplomat told AFP.
Asked by reporters on Monday what Turkey's response to Barzani would be, Gul
only said: "You will see."
Ankara worries that Kurdish control of Kirkuk and its vast oil reserves would
embolden what it believes are Kurdish ambitions to break away from Baghdad.
Kurdish independence, it fears, could fuel the two-decade insurgency led by the
PKK which has already resulted in more than 37,000 deaths.
Ankara has threatened a cross-border operation into northern Iraq to crack down
on the rebel camps if Baghdad and Washington fail to act against them.
Separately, the New Anatolian daily reported on Monday that Iraqi Kurdish objections
to Istanbul were instrumental in Baghdad's decision to favour Egypt as the venue
of international talks in early May to discuss Iraq's turmoil.
AFP 09 1744 GMT 04 07
Copyright© 2007
AFP. All
Rights Reserved.
Send
this story to a friend
Your
feedback is important to us!
We invite all our readers to share with us
their views and comments about this article.
Write
to editor@petroleumworld.com
Any
question or suggestions, please write to:
editor@petroleumworld.com
Best
Viewed with IE
5.01+
Windows
NT 4.0, '95, '98 and ME +/ 800x600 pixels
|