Kurdish militant PKK says ‘impossible’ to safely meet on dissolution

Kurdish militant PKK says ‘impossible’ to safely meet on dissolution
Above, Syrian Kurds wave flags as they gather in the Kurdish-majority city of Qamishli in northeastern Syria on Feb. 27, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 14 March 2025

Kurdish militant PKK says ‘impossible’ to safely meet on dissolution

Kurdish militant PKK says ‘impossible’ to safely meet on dissolution
  • Abdullah Ocalan, who founded the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), urged his fighters to disarm and disband

ISTANBUL: The outlawed Kurdish PKK said it was currently “impossible” for its leadership to safely meet to formally dissolve the group in line with a demand by its jailed founder, Kurdish media reported Friday.
“Every day (Turkish) reconnaissance planes are flying overhead, they are carrying out daily bombings and every day they are attacking,” the PKK’s co-leader Cemil Bayik told the Kurdish television station, Sterk TV.
“Holding a congress in these conditions is impossible and very dangerous.”
His remarks came two weeks after Abdullah Ocalan, who founded the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), urged his fighters to disarm and disband, ending a decades-long insurgency that has claimed tens of thousands of lives.
In his historic call – which took the form of a letter – he urged the PKK to hold a congress to formalize the decision.
Two days later, the PKK announced a ceasefire, saying it was ready to convene a congress but said “for this to happen, a suitable secure environment must be created,” insisting it would only succeed if Ocalan were to “personally direct and lead it.”
Bayik on Thursday said the congress would happen “if the conditions were fulfilled,” according to the PKK-aligned ANF news agency.
The PKK leadership is holed up in mountainous northern Iraq where Turkish forces have staged multiple air strikes in recent years, targeting the group which is also blacklisted by Washington and Brussels.
Despite the negotiations, there has been no indication that Turkish troops have stopped their operations against the PKK, with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan warning against any delaying tactics.
“If the promises given are not kept and an attempt is made to delay... we will continue our ongoing operations... until we eliminate the last terrorist,” Erdogan said on March 1.
On Wednesday, Erdogan said he would be willing to hold a meeting with a delegation from the pro-Kurdish DEM party – who played a key role in relaying messages between Ocalan and Ankara – “if they ask for it.”
The party confirmed requesting a meeting but said no date had been set.
Many are hoping Ocalan’s call will ultimately result in concessions for the Kurds, who make up around 20 percent of Turkiye’s 85 million population.


Israel enforces home-demolition orders in West Bank and Jerusalem

Israel enforces home-demolition orders in West Bank and Jerusalem
Updated 11 sec ago

Israel enforces home-demolition orders in West Bank and Jerusalem

Israel enforces home-demolition orders in West Bank and Jerusalem
  • Man compelled to demolish his own home in East Jerusalem; Israeli forces raze several homes in areas around Nablus and Jericho while expanding settlements
  • Israeli authorities force Palestinians, particularly in Jerusalem, to demolish their own homes by alleging they lack proper permits

LONDON: Israeli authorities forced Taher Darbas, a Palestinian resident of occupied East Jerusalem, to demolish his home in Al-Issawiya, in the northeast of the city, on Monday morning.

Israeli authorities compel Palestinians, particularly in Jerusalem, to demolish their own homes by alleging that they lack proper permits. Those who refuse to comply face demolition carried out by Israeli authorities, incurring high costs.

Israel regularly denies building permits to Palestinians in Jerusalem, while illegally expanding Jewish settlements in the city and the occupied West Bank.

Also on Monday, Israeli forces knocked down a home in Furush Beit Dajan, a village to the east of Nablus, where more than 90 percent of homes are subject to demolition notices.

Meanwhile Israel continued to bulldoze land and pave a road for settlers in the eastern village of Al-Lubban, south of Nablus. They also demolished two houses belonging to the Abu Jaber family in the town of Marj Ghazal, north of Jericho, the Palestinian Wafa news agency reported.

In the past 24 months, Israeli authorities have conducted 1,014 demolitions in the West Bank and Jerusalem, targeting 3,679 buildings, including 1,288 inhabited homes, 244 uninhabited homes and 962 agricultural and other structures, it said.

Israel’s home-demolition policies aim to forcibly displace Palestinians and expand Israeli settlements in Jerusalem, in violation of international and humanitarian laws that guarantee the right to housing, Wafa added.

The Israeli government faces charges of war crimes and genocide in the occupied Palestinian territories at the International Criminal Court and the International Court of Justice.


PKK withdrawal ends first peace process phase: Turkiye’s pro-Kurdish party says

PKK withdrawal ends first peace process phase: Turkiye’s pro-Kurdish party says
Updated 54 min 47 sec ago

PKK withdrawal ends first peace process phase: Turkiye’s pro-Kurdish party says

PKK withdrawal ends first peace process phase: Turkiye’s pro-Kurdish party says
  • Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) began withdrawing its forces on Sunday, a year after peace process began
  • Turkiye’s pro-Kurdish DEM party urges government to press ahead with 'legal and political steps'

ANKARA: Turkiye’s pro-Kurdish DEM party on Monday hailed the withdrawal of PKK fighters from Turkish soil as a “critical” step that completed the first phase of Ankara’s peace process with the Kurdish militants.
The Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), which has fought the government for four decades, began withdrawing its forces on Sunday, urging Turkiye to take the legal steps to advance the process which began a year ago when Ankara offered an olive branch to its jailed leader Abdullah Ocalan.
“This decision to withdraw is the most concrete expression of (the PKK’s) resolve on the path to peace,” DEM co-chair Tuncer Bakirhan told reporters, describing it as “one of the most critical and significant steps.”
“At this point, the first phase of the (peace) process has concluded,” he said, urging the government to press ahead with the “critical and vital second phase... (of) legal and political steps.”
“Parliament must facilitate and develop this process. Legal arrangements must be made for the transition period. These will not only be technical arrangements, they will be the building blocks of peace,” he said.
“A solution to the Kurdish issue means the democratization of Turkiye, we all win.”
Turkiye has set up a parliamentary commission to prepare a peace process and a legal framework for the political integration of the PKK and its fighters. The DEM has urged authorities to act quickly.
“In this new phase of the process, taking political and legal steps swiftly is crucial for its progress,” said Bakirhan’s co-chair Tulay Hatimogullari.
Parliamentary speaker Numan Kurtulmus, who heads the commission, on Monday said once the PKK move was confirmed by Turkiye’s security and intelligence agencies, “a period of legislative amendments” related to the process would begin.

Ocalan’s freedom ‘crucial’

Indirect talks with the PKK began last year with the backing of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, with the DEM, Turkiye’s third-biggest party, playing a key role in facilitating the emerging agreement.
The party has said it will send a delegation to meet Erdogan on Thursday.
Since December, a DEM delegation has regularly met with Ocalan who has been serving a life sentence in solitary confinement on Imrali prison island near Istanbul since 1999.
Now 76, Ocalan has been central to the peace drive, making a historic call in February that led his fighters to renounce their armed struggle in May. That drew a line under four decades of conflict that had claimed some 50,000 lives.
The PKK has repeatedly called for his release, with Bakirhan urging the government to ease his conditions and allow him to take a greater role in the process.
Ocalan’s role was “decisive” in the peace efforts reaching this stage, he said, calling for him to be given the freedom to “take greater initiative and play a more active role in the process.”
The PKK on Sunday said the parliamentary commission must meet with Ocalan. Senior leader Devrim Palu told AFP his freedom was “crucial for this process to advance with greater effectiveness.”


Israel won’t allow Turkiye in international Gaza force, foreign minister says

Israel won’t allow Turkiye in international Gaza force, foreign minister says
Updated 27 October 2025

Israel won’t allow Turkiye in international Gaza force, foreign minister says

Israel won’t allow Turkiye in international Gaza force, foreign minister says
  • Gideon Saar says Israel opposes the participation of Turkiye because of President Erdogan’s 'hostility' to Israel
  • Turkiye is seen by many as a strong contender for a Gaza international peace force

BUDAPEST, Hungary: Israel will not allow Turkish troops to take part in an international peace force that the United States is seeking to create to oversee the ceasefire agreement in the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza, Israel’s top diplomat said Monday.
The 20-point truce deal brokered by US President Donald Trump earlier this month envisages an international task force to monitor the ceasefire but does not mention which countries would provide the troops.
It only says the US would “work with Arab and international partners to develop a temporary International Stabilization Force” that would deploy in Gaza. The force would train and provide support to “vetted Palestinian police forces” in Gaza, and will “consult with Jordan and Egypt who have extensive experience in this field.”
The creation of the task force is currently underway, according US officials. But the second phase of the ceasefire agreement has not yet begun, Israeli officials said.
Speaking to journalists during a visit to Hungary, Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar said Israel opposes the participation of Turkiye because of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's long-standing hostility to Israel. Saar said Israel has communicated its opposition to Turkiye’s military involvement to US officials.
“Countries that want or are ready to send armed forces should be at least fair to Israel,” Saar said. He did not elaborate.
US officials have said there would be no American boots on the ground in Gaza. During their visits to Israel last week, US Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio said multiple countries would be interested in joining an international force that would deploy to Gaza and train a Palestinian police force for the future.
The US was working to secure a UN mandate or other international authorization for the force, Rubio said.
Turkiye is seen by many as a strong contender for the force due to military power its close ties with the Palestinian militant Hamas group that is supposed to disarm under the ceasefire deal. Turkiye also once had strong diplomatic relations with Israel, though they have been at an all-time low over the war in Gaza, sparked by the Oct. 7, 2023 Hamas-led attack on Israel.
Erdogan has criticized Israel, and particularly Netanyahu, with strident rhetoric since the start of the Gaza war, which has killed tens of thousands of Palestinians, accusing Israel of genocide and comparing Netanyahu to Nazi leader Adolf Hitler.
Hamas political officials regularly visit Turkiye, and Israel previously accused Turkiye of allowing Hamas to plan attacks from its territory, as well as carry out recruitment and fundraising.
Saar’s comments on Monday echoed remarks made by Netanyahu during a government meeting on Sunday.
“Israel will determine which forces are unacceptable to us,” Netanyahu said Sunday. “This is, of course, acceptable to the United States as well, as its most senior representatives have expressed in recent days.”
Earlier this month, Turkiye — one of the most active contributors of aid to Gaza — appointed a special coordinator to oversee humanitarian assistance to Gaza.
Turkish organizations, including the Red Crescent and the emergency response agency AFAD, are making preparations toward reconstruction efforts, medical relief, and infrastructure restoration, officials said.


Turkiye eyes Eurofighter deal as UK’s Starmer visits

Britain’s Prime Minister Keir Starmer talks during a media conference.
Britain’s Prime Minister Keir Starmer talks during a media conference.
Updated 27 October 2025

Turkiye eyes Eurofighter deal as UK’s Starmer visits

Britain’s Prime Minister Keir Starmer talks during a media conference.
  • Turkiye wants to modernize its air force and is hoping to finalize the purchase of 40 European-made fighter aircraft

ANKARA: British Prime Minister Keir Starmer arrived in Ankara Monday to meet President Recep Tayyip Erdogan for talks focused on Turkiye’s purchase of Eurofighter jets.
Starmer landed at an air force base near Ankara, accompanied by UK Defense Minister John Healey and Air Chief Marshall Harv Smyth, the head of Britain’s air force, who were welcomed by their Turkish counterparts, Turkiye’s defense ministry said.
Visiting dignitaries normally fly into the Turkish capital’s Esenboga airport.
Turkiye wants to modernize its air force and is hoping to finalize the purchase of 40 European-made fighter aircraft, which are jointly produced by Britain, Germany, Italy and Spain.
Speaking on condition of anonymity, a Turkish official told AFP discussions were ongoing but Britain would hand over a number of jets on Monday without saying how many.
Analysts said it would likely be two.
Erdogan and Starmer were to meet and then hold a joint press conference in the evening, officials said.
“Turkiye and the Eurofighter is quite the saga,” Aaron Stein, president of the Foreign Policy Research Institute, told AFP, saying Ankara had turned down an offer to join the European consortium, focusing instead on the US fighter jet program.
“Ankara was invited to join the consortium or become an equal member a few times but they chose the F-35,” he said.
After Washington booted Ankara out of its F-35 fighter program in 2019 over its purchase of an S-400 Russian surface-to-air missile defense system, Turkiye turned its attention to Europe.
Germany initially blocked the Eurofighter sale over Turkiye’s stance on the Gaza war, but lifted its opposition in July, clearing the way for the sale to go ahead. Chancellor Friedrich Merz is to meet Erdogan in Ankara on Thursday.
Qatari leader due in Turkiye
Last week, Erdogan hed talks with Qatar’s Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani, with Turkiye floating plans to acquire some of Doha’s Eurofighters.
Doha ordered 24 Eurofighters in 2017 with the last two due to be delivered this year. It moved to acquire 12 more late last year, observers said.
Any such move would likely be part of the deal with London who would have to grant its approval, analysts said.
The Qatari leader is in Ankara on Tuesday for talks to clarify outstanding issues, the Turkish official said.
The jets Britain was to sign over to Turkiye on Monday were likely to be those that had been destined for Qatar, Stein said.
Instead of being sent to Doha, “they’ll simply be shipped to Turkiye,” he explained.
Gaza’s future is also likely to feature in talks between Erdogan and Starmer, with Turkiye keen to join an international stabilization force — an idea opposed by Israel.


Countries will reject ‘peace enforcing’ in Gaza: Jordan’s king

Countries will reject ‘peace enforcing’ in Gaza: Jordan’s king
Updated 27 October 2025

Countries will reject ‘peace enforcing’ in Gaza: Jordan’s king

Countries will reject ‘peace enforcing’ in Gaza: Jordan’s king
  • Mandate of security forces should be peacekeeping, not ‘running on patrol with weapons’
  • Queen Rania: ‘Trump was the first president in a long time to actually apply pressure on Israel’

LONDON: Countries will reject “peace enforcing” in Gaza under the plan drawn up by US President Donald Trump, Jordan’s King Abdullah II has told the BBC.

The plan calls for Arab and other states to send personnel to “train and provide support to vetted Palestinian police forces in Gaza, and (who) will consult with Jordan and Egypt who have extensive experience in this field.”

The king said his country and Egypt would be prepared to train Palestinian security forces, but a scenario involving foreign troops upholding order in Gaza would be unacceptable.

“What is the mandate of security forces inside of Gaza? And we hope that it is peacekeeping, because if it’s peace enforcing, nobody will want to touch that,” he added.

“Peacekeeping is that you’re sitting there supporting the local police force, the Palestinians, which Jordan and Egypt are willing to train in large numbers, but that takes time.

“If we’re running around Gaza on patrol with weapons, that’s not a situation that any country would like to get involved in.”

The king said sending Jordanian troops to Gaza would be challenging because his country is “too close politically” to the situation.

Half of his subjects claim Palestinian descent, and 2.3 million Palestinian refugees reside in Jordan.

Fears abound among many members of the international community that peacekeepers could be caught up in renewed hostilities between Israel and Hamas. 

“If we don’t solve this problem, if we don’t find a future for Israelis and Palestinians and a relationship between the Arab and Muslim world and Israel, we’re doomed,” the king said.

In a separate interview with the BBC, Jordan’s Queen Rania condemned the failure of the international community to end the war sooner.

“You know what it’s like to be a parent over the last two years? To watch your children suffering, starving, shaking in terror, and to be powerless to do anything about it, and to know that the whole world is watching and not to do anything about it,” said the queen, who is of Palestinian heritage.

“That nightmare, it’s the nightmare of any parent, but that nightmare has been the daily reality for Palestinians for the last two years.”

She praised the Trump administration for breaking through the impasse, saying: “To his credit, Trump was the first president in a long time to actually apply pressure on Israel.

“Beforehand, when they crossed lines, the US president would just maybe just say a few words of rebuke, or they just get a slap on the wrist.

“President Trump actually got (Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin) Netanyahu to actually agree to a ceasefire. And I hope that he continues to be engaged in this process.”

She added: “I truly believe that Palestinians and Israelis can exist side by side. In the current atmosphere, there’s too much animosity, too much anger and grief and hatred and cynicism between the two peoples to actually forge a peace on their own.

“I’m not being naive here. But I think, with the push of the international community, that is the only way.

“So many times during the past two years, hope had felt elusive. Choosing hope was not easy … It’s hard, it’s heavy. But it’s the only path that doesn’t deny Palestinians or betray their struggle or our humanity.”