November 14, 2024

The Queens County Citizen

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Iraqis flee border areas as Turkey strikes Kurdish militants

African states soften call for more scrutiny of racism in US

IRBIL, Iraq (AP) — Dozens of civilians fled villages in northern Iraq on Monday as Turkey stepped up a military services marketing campaign focusing on Kurdish rebels that has drawn condemnation from Iraqi officials.

Residents loaded vehicles with their belongings and shepherds led livestock out of the Iraqi border village of Keshani as Turkish forces bombarded suspected positions of the Kurdistan Workers’ Social gathering, or PKK, which has waged a decades-very long insurgency from Turkey.

Turkey released an air and ground offensive into the border location final week in a marketing campaign to root out the PKK, which Ankara maintains has bases in northern Iraq. Those fleeing mentioned they were being frightened of airstrikes and Turkish troops moving into their households.

“We are fearful mainly because of the Turks. We really do not want our young ones to be killed, so we have to go away, but we do not have any place to go,” a lady fleeing Keshani explained.

“Nothing is remaining and our authorities didn’t do nearly anything,” she said, talking on affliction of anonymity because of protection considerations.

All-around 15 family members reside in Keshani, where most are inclined to farmland and livestock, in accordance to Delsher Abdulsatatr, the mayor of a nearby city.

The Turkish armed service introduced late Sunday that a soldier died in a clinic in Turkey of wounds sustained in fighting. His dying delivers the Turkish demise toll in the operation to two. At minimum seven civilians have reportedly been killed on the Iraqi aspect.

Turkey frequently carries out air and ground assaults in opposition to the PKK in northern Iraq. It claims neither the Iraqi govt nor the regional Iraqi Kurdish administration have taken steps to fight the team.

Iraq’s Foreign Ministry summoned the Turkish ambassador 2 times final week to express what it stated was a “strongly worded protest.”

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