Turkey attacks Kurdish targets in Iraq and Syria

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The conflict in Syria has killed nearly half a million people. File pic
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  • The raids on Tuesday night targeted shelters, tunnels, caves, ammunition depots, bases and training camps operated by the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK)
  • The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the Syria strikes hit a Kurdish-run power station near the town of Al-Malikiyah in Hasakeh province

Turkey has launched deadly strikes against Kurdish targets in Iraq and Syria, where Kurdish forces were still reeling from the largest Islamic State group attack in nearly three years.

The raids on Tuesday night targeted shelters, tunnels, caves, ammunition depots, bases and training camps operated by the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) and the People’s Protection Units (YPG) which Ankara views as terrorist groups, Turkey’s defense ministry said Wednesday.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the Syria strikes hit a Kurdish-run power station near the town of Al-Malikiyah in Hasakeh province, where a brazen jailbreak attempt by IS jihadists last month sparked days of clashes that have left hundreds dead.

“At least four people were killed in the strike targeting a power station near Al-Malikiyah,” the Britain-based war monitor said, adding that they were all security guards.

The attack came hours after hundreds of mourners gathered in Al-Malikiyah for mass funerals honoring Kurdish fighters killed in a week of battles with IS jihadists who had attacked the Ghwayran jail on January 20.

In Iraq’s autonomous Kurdistan region, Turkish strikes hit PKK positions in the Makhmur and Sinjar regions, where bombardment caused “human and material losses,” Kurdish authorities said, without specifying a death toll.

As part of the attack, Turkish “military aircraft bombarded six PKK positions in the Karjokh mountains,” which overlook a camp for Kurdish refugees from Turkey, Kurdish counter-terrorism services said in a statement.

The PKK-linked armed group that oversees management of the camp reported “the death of two combatants and dozens of injuries among camp residents.”

It said the wounded where stable and receiving the necessary medical care.

Blacklisted as a terrorist group by Ankara and its Western allies, the PKK has been waging an insurgency against the Turkish state since 1984.

The YPG — which forms the backbone of the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces fighting IS in Syria — is viewed by Ankara as the PKK’s Syria offshoot.

Washington relied heavily on the SDF to defeat IS jihadists who overran large swathes of Syria and neighboring Iraq in 2014.

The SDF said 40 of its fighters as well as more than 70 prison guards and staff were killed in the week-long IS attack on the Ghwayran jail in Hasakeh.

The YPG condemned the latest Turkish strikes that came on the heels of IS’s largest Syria operation in three years.

“Turkey tries to continue what ISIS started,” it said on Twitter, using a different acronym for IS.

“Everyone has to take action against this attack now.”

Hundreds of mourners gathered in Al-Malikiyah on Tuesday to honor slain SDF fighters, many brandishing Kurdish flags and portraits of the dead.

Since the start of its military intervention in Syria in 2016, Ankara has sporadically bombed the YPG and carried out military operations on the ground targeting IS and Kurdish forces.

Turkey also routinely carries out attacks in Iraq, where the PKK has bases and training camps in the northern Sinjar region and on the mountainous border with Turkey.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who has threatened to “clean up” parts of northern Iraq, accuses the PKK of using the mountainous border area as a springboard for its insurgency.

In December, Turkey carried out retaliatory air strikes in northern Iraq after three Turkish soldiers died in a PKK attack.

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