ERDOGAN ACCUSES GERMAN AND FRANCE FOR LOW LEVEL STRUGGLE AGAINST PKK

Afp / ANKARA, 28.9.2012 –  Turkey said it could hold a fresh round of talks with Kurdish PKK rebels but accused France and Germany Thursday of obstructing its efforts to solve the nearly three-decade-old unrest.The Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) has stepped up its activities against the Turkish government in recent months but Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan did not rule out fresh negotiations.

“We take such steps when deemed necessary,” he told the private NTV television network when asked if his AKP government was favorable to dialogue with the Kurdish rebels. Erdogan suggested that the talks could take place in Imrali – an island off Istanbul where PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan is imprisoned, or in Oslo which hosted negotiations between 2009 and 2011.

“The national intelligence organization is our most important instrument here,” said Erdogan.  He stressed that the timing was also important for a new round of talks, saying: “We’ll take this step when the right time comes.” Turkey has witnessed a sharp escalation of Kurdish rebel attacks targeting its security forces in the southeast in recent months, triggering fully-fledged military operations in the region. Erdogan’s comments follow his interview with Kanal 7 television on Wednesday when he said: “If talks enable us to resolve something, let’s do it.”

Devlet Bahceli, the leader of the Nationalist Movement Party, immediately denounced Erdogan’s openness to new dialogue as “unpardonable folly”.

Selahattin Demirtas, co-chairman of the pro-Kurdish Peace and Democracy Party (BDP) said in a recent interview with reporters that a mutual ceasefire would lead to “a fertile ground for discussion.” On Thursday, Erdogan also accused Western countries and particularly France and Germany of obstructing Ankara’s fight against the PKK.

“The West doesn’t want us to solve this [PKK] problem,” he said.

“Let me say it openly. Germany doesn’t want it, France doesn’t want it and they are not helping us on this issue. On the contrary, they are letting the terrorist chiefs freely circulate in their countries.”

Erdogan also lashed out at Scandinavian countries for harboring the PKK.

“On the one hand, you will stand up at the EU and label the PKK as a terrorist organization and then you will allow their representatives to freely circulate in your countries,” said Erdogan. “They are under your protection and you are condoning their activities,” he said.

“Not tactically but on the point of becoming an armed power, the [PKK] has not seized such an opportunity in any period in the past.” “We will minimize the operations if the PKK lays down arms,” Erdogan said.

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