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ANKARA: German Mountaineers Will Not Be Released Soon, Says PKK

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  • ANKARA: German Mountaineers Will Not Be Released Soon, Says PKK

    GERMAN MOUNTAINEERS WILL NOT BE RELEASED SOON, SAYS PKK

    Turkish Daily News
    July 11 2008
    Turkey

    Germany's efforts to crackdown on the outlawed PKK is the reason why
    three mountaineers were kidnapped as they were climbing Mt. Agrı,
    the group said in a statement. The governor's office says the mountain
    is closed to climbers until the Germans are freed

    ISTANBUL - TDN with wire dispatches

    The outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) confirmed yesterday they
    had kidnapped three Germans on a climbing trip in eastern Turkey
    and said they were in good health, the pro-Kurdish Firat news agency
    reported.

    The group threatened not to release the hostages unless Berlin ended
    its crackdown against their group and its supporters, according to
    a statement by the PKK, published on Firat's Internet site.

    "The German tourists will not be released unless the German state
    announces that it has given up its hostile policies against the
    Kurdish people and the PKK," the statement said.

    The PKK's statement came as Mount Agrı (Ararat) in the east of the
    country is declared closed to climbers until further notice in order
    to prevent mountaineers hindering the security operation launched to
    free the kidnapped Germans, the Dogan news agency reported yesterday.

    Five members of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party, or PKK,
    kidnapped three of a group of 13 German mountaineers late Tuesday as
    they were camping at an altitude of 3,200 meters.

    The PKK members told the group that they were taking hostages in
    protest at the German government's crackdown on PKK-affiliated bodies
    and its supporters in Germany, Agrı Governor Mehmet Cetin told the
    Anatolia news agency Wednesday.

    The kidnappers took the tourists' mobile phones as they left the camp.

    "The remaining mountaineers noticed in the morning that the PKK members
    had thrown some of the phones under a rock and used them to inform us,"
    Cetin said.

    Paramilitary troops have launched an operation to rescue the hostages,
    while the other climbers were brought down from the mountain.

    Last month, German authorities banned the Danish-based Roj TV from
    broadcasting in the country because it promoted the PKK. They also
    ordered the closure of a production house that supplied the channel
    with programming.

    The PKK, which is listed as a terrorist group by Ankara and several
    Western countries, has been fighting for self-rule in the east and
    southeast of the country since 1984. The conflict has claimed more
    than 37,000 lives.

    Mount Agrı, situated close to the Iranian and Armenian borders,
    is the highest mountain in Turkey at 5,137 meters (16,853 feet) and
    is believed by many to be the final resting place of the Biblical
    Noah's Ark.

    The Dogan news agency identified the kidnapped Germans as Lars Holger
    Renne, 33, Martin Georg, 49, and Helmut Johann, 65.

    Governor Cetin said they will do everything in their power to rescue
    the kidnapped Germans safely. "We will consider opening Mt. Agrı to
    climbers after the release of the tourists," he said, adding that
    the rest of the mountaineering group left Dogubeyazıt yesterday
    for Istanbul.

    The security forces have established a cordon around the mountain,
    reported Dogan news agency, noting that all details of individuals
    traveling to and from villages on the outskirts of Mt. Agrı were
    being recorded.

    Bad for business:

    Travel agents and hoteliers in the region are furious over the wide
    coverage generated by the kidnappings, arguing that it has cost them
    serious business, reported Dogan.

    One agent told Dogan that the biggest revenue generator in the
    region is tourism and after Mt. Agrı is closed to climbing, no one
    will visit.

    --Boundary_(ID_2g4FvZGmzqweeFwaVTApkw)--
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