http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2012/1112/re5.htm

30 August - 5 September 2012
Issue No. 1112 


Published in Cairo by AL-AHRAM established in 1875
        
     



Terror in Turkey: who is to blame?
With Syria imploding on its borders, Turkey is increasingly worried about armed 
groups in the vicinity using force to press their demands, writes Sayed 
Abdel-Meguid in Ankara 

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The past two weeks were traumatic in Turkey, where forest fires threatened 
border areas, secessionists struck in some areas, and long-dormant terrorist 
organisations threatened to resume their bloody activities.

It all started with the forest fires on the borders with Syria. The fires, 
close to refugee camps, triggered accusations of arson and suspicions that 
agents of Bashar Al-Assad were involved. As Turkish authorities scrambled to 
fight the fires, more Syrian refugees were crossing the border, adding to the 
burden on humanitarian aid and threatening a replay of the 1991 situation, when 
0.5 million Iraqis crossed the border en masse.

To make things worse, secessionists associated with the PKK, the Kurdish 
Workers' Party, may have used the turmoil on the borders to infiltrate deep 
into Turkey. On the second day of the feast, a police station in Gaziantep was 
blown up. The explosion took the lives of nine people, including four children. 
The death toll may rise, as other casualties are still in a critical condition.

The PKK denied any connection with the blast, but in the mind of most Turks, it 
is the only group capable of such brutality. In reprisal, a mob burned down the 
offices of the Kurdish Peace and Democracy Party, closely linked to the PKK.

In another tragedy, a traffic accident led to the death of 10, including nine 
military servicemen, on the Sirnak-Uludere road.

Samil Tayyar, the Justice and Development Party parliamentarian for Gaziantep, 
blamed Syrian intelligence for the blast, saying that the refugee camps in 
Hatay and Orfa have been infiltrated with agents of the Syrian regime.

The government is taking a lot of heat over what many Turks consider to be a 
laxity in security. Before the Gaziantep blast, warnings were issued of an 
impending attack by a booby-trapped vehicle, but no precautions were taken.

Bulent Arinc, the deputy prime minister, tried his best to calm down critics. 
But throughout the media, politicians including those associated with the 
government -- slammed the authorities for not taking enough action to protect 
the public against possible terrorist attacks.

The situation grew particularly tense when the defunct ASALA (Armenian Secret 
Army for the Liberation of Armenia), mysteriously rising from the ashes, warned 
that it would resume its operations unless the government distances itself from 
the civil war in Syria. The terrorist organisation, which disbanded in 1986, 
said that the Turkish government should cease its support for the Free Syrian 
Army, which allegedly carried out attacks against Armenians. In a statement 
sent to the press, ASALA said that if the Turkish army were to conduct any 
military action in Syria, the group would resume its attacks on Turkish 
facilities and diplomats.

Feeling beleaguered, the Turkish government is now blaming the Americans for 
failing to give it the support it needed. It is particularly upset that armed 
elements apparently arriving from northern Iraq were able to launch an attack 
inside its territories. President Abdullah Gul, who had cut short a visit to 
Kirgizstan because of a middle ear infection, urged Washington to do more on 
the anti-terror front.

In an attempt to remedy the situation, Turkey and the US have agreed to take 
extra measures to confront the PKK, Al-Qaeda and other extremist groups. The 
main aim, Turkish officials say, is to prevent extremist groups from using the 
political vacuum in north Syria to their advantage.

American diplomats in Baghdad say that they intend to hold talks with Massoud 
Barzani on ways to stop Kurdish secessionists from launching operations from 
Iraq.

Kurdish secessionists, some say, are not only coming from Iraq, but also from 
Iran. The Iranians used to cooperate with the Turks on anti-terror matters, but 
their cooperation ended about 18 months ago, when the Turks decided to install 
an anti-missile shield in Malataya despite Iranian protests.

To stem further trouble on its border areas, Turkey wants the UN to agree to a 
safe zone in northern Syria. If a five kilometre-deep strip of land is declared 
a safe haven along the Syrian borders, then the Turks will have less work, 
expense, and risk dealing with the issue of Syrian refugees, goes the argument. 

The proposal is going to be discussed soon at the UN, but may run into Chinese 
and Russian opposition.


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