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PKK Threatens Further Attacks On Baku-Ceyhan Oil-Pipeline

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  • PKK Threatens Further Attacks On Baku-Ceyhan Oil-Pipeline

    PKK THREATENS FURTHER ATTACKS ON BAKU-CEYHAN OIL-PIPELINE

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    09.08.2008 13:22 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ Kurdish rebels threatened more attacks on economic
    targets yesterday after claiming responsibility for a blast in eastern
    Turkey that shut down the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline, an agency
    close to the rebels reported.

    "Attacks on economic interests have a deterring effect (on
    Turkey)... As long as the Turkish state insists on war, such acts will
    naturally be carried out," Bahoz Erdal, a commander of the Kurdistan
    Workers' Party (PKK), told the Firat news agency.

    The PKK claimed responsibility for a blast Tuesday night on a section
    of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) oil pipeline near Refahiye, in
    Erzincan province.

    The explosion sparked a fire which continued to burn yesterday,
    triggering fresh jitters on world oil markets. The conduit, which
    supplies oil to Western markets, is expected to remain shut for about
    15 days.

    The PKK said the explosion was "an act of sabotage" by its militants,
    the details of which would be revealed later.

    The PKK, listed as a terrorist group by Turkey and much of the
    international community, has sabotaged gas and oil pipelines in
    the past as part of its armed campaign for self-rule in the mainly
    Kurdish southeast.

    Erdal said the pipeline blast and other PKK attacks in recent weeks
    were in response to an intensified Turkish crackdown against the
    rebels, both inside Turkey and in neighboring northern Iraq, where
    they take refuge.

    Turkish military action "has required us to boost our resistance in
    self-defense," he said.

    The Turkish authorities have played down the possibility of sabotage
    of the BTC pipeline, and the Anatolia news agency yesterday quoted
    unnamed officials as saying that the PKK might be seeking publicity.

    An official from Turkey's state-run oil and gas company Botas said
    Thursday that no trace of sabotage had been found but that a definite
    conclusion could be reached only after the fire at the pipeline was
    extinguished.

    Refahiye's sub-governor had earlier ruled out sabotage, saying a
    fault had been detected before the blast.

    Inaugurated in 2006, the 1,774-kilometer (1,109-mile) BTC pipeline is
    the world's second longest. It carries Azeri oil from the Caspian Sea
    fields, the world's third-largest reserve, to Turkey's Mediterranean
    port of Ceyhan, from where tankers transport the crude to Western
    markets. It was pumping about 1.2 million barrels of oil per day
    before the blast.

    The fire may be put out today or tomorrow and repairs finished 10
    days later, a senior source at Turkey's Energy Ministry told Reuters
    yesterday, giving an earlier date than some expectations. Once the
    blaze is extinguished, efforts will be accelerated to assess the
    damage to the 1-million-barrel-per-day pipeline and bring it back on
    line within 10 days, an official said.

    Analysts suggest the shutdown could last longer than Turkish officials
    estimate and British energy giant BP said it was looking at alternative
    means of delivering supplies to Western clients.

    The PKK took up arms for Kurdish self-rule in Turkey's southeast in
    1984, sparking a conflict that has claimed more than 37,000 lives,
    the AFP reports.
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