Turkish parliament on Wednesday approved the motion submitted by
the government for cross-border military operations in fight
against the outlawed Kurdish Workers' Party (PKK).
Turkish parliament Speaker Koksal Toptan announced after the
voting that the parliament passed the motion by 507 votes to
19.
A total of 526 lawmakers participated in the voting after
hearing a debate over the motion.
The motion empowers the government to order the military forces
to cross into northern Iraq to pursue the PKK rebels who take
shelter there during the next one-year period.
However, the passage of the motion set the US administration's
nerves on edge as US President George W. Bush urged immediately
Turkey not to take cross-border military action into Iraq.
"We are making it very clear to Turkey that we don't think it is
in their interests to send troops into Iraq. Actually, they have
troops already stationed in Iraq ... We don't think it's in their
interests to send more troops in," Bush told a news conference in
the US.
Apart from the US, another world power Russia also voiced its
opposition to Turkish military operation in Iraq.
Russia's Duma (lower house of parliament) Tuesday called on
Turkey not to launch an offensive against the PKK terrorists in
northern Iraq, citing the US invasion of Iraq, which was a "gross
violation of international law," a lesson.
Turkey should "evaluate all possible negative consequences of
across-border operation and display wisdom and restraint,"
lawmakers in the Duma said in a resolution.
Just hours before the parliamentary voting on the motion, Iraqi
Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki called his Turkish counterpart Recep
Tayyip Erdogan to pledge to end the presence and activities of the
PKK in his country.
The Iraqi government "is absolutely determined to end the
activities and the presence of the PKK terrorist organization on
Iraqi territory," Turkey's Anatolia news agency quoted Maliki
assaying.
Asking for "another chance" for his country, Maliki said his
government has given a strict order to the Kurdish autonomous
regional administration in the north of Iraq to that end and a
special delegation was formed for the issue.
In response, Erdogan said he could meet with the Iraqi
delegation but stressed his country could not "endure any further
loss of time."
He reiterated to his Iraqi counterpart Turkey's resolution
towards taking any measure against the terrorist organization.
The pressures from varied countries, including the US, can not
budge Turkey's will to eradicate the PKK, a thorn in its flesh.
Addressing before the parliamentary group meeting of his ruling
Justice and Development Party (AKP) on Tuesday, Erdogan strongly
refuted those opposition voices. He said "those who cannot tell
terrorists to stop acts of terror have no right to tell us not to
launch a cross-border operation."
The PKK has increased its attacks on government troops in
southeastern Turkey, which led to rising Turkish demands for an
incursion into northern Iraq to crush the rebels based there.
The group, listed as a terrorist organization by Turkey, the US
and the EU, launched an armed campaign for an ethnic homeland in
the mainly Kurdish southeastern Turkey in 1984, sparking decades of
strife that has claimed more than 30,000 lives.
(Xinhua News Agency October 18, 2007)