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  • Kurdish rebels attack Turkish army

    Aljazeera.net, Qatar
    July 13 2005


    Kurdish rebels attack Turkish army


    Kurdish fighters have become increasingly active


    Kurdish rebels have fired rockets at a Turkish battalion in eastern
    Turkey in an overnight raid.


    It was not clear on Wednesday whether there were any casualties or
    damage, officials said.

    The guerrillas attacked the infantry battalion based in the town of
    Digor, in the province of Kars, close to the Armenian border.

    Kurdish fighters have become increasingly active and their attacks
    increasingly bold over the past several months.

    Hikmet Ozyunlu, mayor of Digor, told the Anatolia news agency that he
    heard loud explosions, followed by machine-gun fire which caused
    panic in the small town surrounded by rocky hills.

    "Later, we learned that they attacked the military unit. The
    telephone lines were also cut in the town. They broke the peace in
    Digor," Ozyunlu said.

    Earlier this week, guerrillas set up a roadblock and captured a
    Turkish soldier in eastern Turkey. Turkey sent more than 1000 troops
    on a mission to look for him, but the soldier's whereabouts remain
    unknown.

    Kurdish guerrillas have been fighting for autonomy in the country's
    east and southeast since 1984. The clashes have left more than 37,000
    people dead since then.

    Extradition attempt

    Meanwhile, Turkey asked the US to extradite two Turkish Muslims who
    were reportedly captured in Iraq on suspicion of involvement in the
    2003 bombings in Turkey that killed some 60 people, police officials
    said on Wednesday.


    Scores were killed in blasts that
    targeted Istanbul synagogues


    The suspects, who were reportedly captured earlier this year during
    fighting near the northern Iraqi town of Tal Afar, are being held in
    Abu Ghraib prison, the officials said.

    US officials were not immediately available for comment but private
    NTV television said the US had not yet responded to the Turkish
    request.

    Police officials identified the two suspects as Sadettin Akdas, 22,
    and Burhan Kus, 32.

    Kus has been indicted by Turkish prosecutors on suspicion that he
    helped build the Istanbul truck bombs while prosecutors accuse Akdas
    of being a member of the cell that helped carry out the attack.

    The blasts in November 2003 killed some 60 people and targeted two
    synagogues - Beth Israel and Neve Shalom - as well as the British
    consulate and a London-based bank.

    Prison letters

    In April, the defence attorney for the two submitted a letter to the
    court overseeing the prosecution of bombing suspects, saying Akdas
    and Kus wrote to their families from Iraq saying they were being held
    in Abu Ghraib prison.

    Lawyer Ilhami Sayan said the Red Cross relayed the letter to his
    clients' families, who appealed to Turkish officials to have them
    brought to Turkey.

    Police said the two were among six suspects who fled to Syria a few
    days before the November attacks on the synagogues.

    The other four, including Akdas' brother, Habib, who is believed to
    be one of the masterminds of the attack, were reportedly killed
    fighting US troops, the Milliyet newspaper reported on Wednesday.

    Habib Akdas is believed to have met Abu Hafs al-Masri, a former top
    lieutenant of Osama bin Laden, in 2001.
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