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Turks Detain Suspected Kurdish Militants

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  • Turks Detain Suspected Kurdish Militants

    TURKS DETAIN SUSPECTED KURDISH MILITANTS

    CRI, China
    April 12 2006

    Police raided several homes around the Turkish capital and detained
    20 suspected Kurdish militants alleged to be planning a series of
    firebomb attacks, the Anatolia news agency reported Tuesday.

    The raids follow some of the worst clashes between security forces
    and Kurdish protesters in decades, in which 16 civilians have been
    killed in the past week.

    Kurdish militants have stepped up their attacks on Turkish security
    forces, and several soldiers have been killed by land mines blamed
    on Kurdish rebels.

    A land mine in the southeastern province of Sirnak injured six
    children who were playing in a field, and two of them were said to
    be in serious condition, NTV television reported Tuesday.

    Land mine casualties are common in Turkey's southeast, where Kurdish
    guerrillas fighting for autonomy commonly use them to attack military
    targets. Turkey says it has not planted mines since 1998.

    A militant Kurdish group called the Kurdistan Freedom Falcons claimed
    responsibility Monday for a bomb found by a bus driver after he had
    driven prosecutors and judges to work at two courts in Istanbul.

    In a message posted on its Web site, the group said the bomb was
    a warning to judges and prosecutors to stop acting against Kurdish
    militants. It said it would use such bombs in the future if "judicial
    terrorism" against Kurds continued.

    "Otherwise, our acts of warning will turn into bloody acts," the
    group said.

    The group is believed to be linked to the outlawed Kurdistan Workers'
    Party, or PKK, which has been fighting for autonomy in the mountainous
    southeast since 1984 in a conflict that has killed 37,000 people. The
    PKK is listed as a terrorist organization by Turkey, the United States
    and the European Union.

    Anti-terrorism police carried out the raids in Ankara early Monday,
    Anatolia said. They seized drums filled with gasoline that they
    believe would have been used to make firebombs.

    Most of those detained were students, the report said.

    Meanwhile, a court in Istanbul began hearing a new lawsuit against
    the country's best-known novelist, who was accused of insulting the
    Turkish people.

    Orhan Pamuk, who gained international acclaim for books including
    "Snow," and "My Name is Red," is being sued by six lawyers who are
    seeking compensation from the writer.

    The case against him hinges on comments he made in a Swiss newspaper
    last year, stating that "30,000 Kurds and 1 million Armenians were
    killed in these lands, and nobody but me dares to talk about it."

    The remarks highlighted two of the most painful episodes in Turkish
    history: the massacre of Armenians during World War I - which Turkey
    insists was not a planned genocide - and the more recent fighting
    with Kurdish guerrillas.

    Also Tuesday, a court dropped charges against four Turkish journalists
    accused of insulting the country's courts, but decided to proceed
    with the trial of a fifth journalist.

    All five were on trial for criticizing a court's decision last year
    to shut down a conference about the mass killings of Armenians by
    Turks during the Ottoman Empire.

    The lawsuits are considered a test of Turkey's readiness for membership
    in the European Union. Turkey embarked on membership talks in October,
    2005.
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