Kurdish rebel leader warns of ‘vengeance’

German Chancellor Angela Merkel (left) speaks with Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu as they walk before their meeting on October 18, 2015, in Istanbul. PM Davutoglu said on Monday that the evidence so far pointed to Kurdish rebels being behind a suicide car bombing in Ankara on Sunday that killed 35 people and two suspected attackers, although nobody has taken responsibility. PHOTO | BULENT KILIC |

What you need to know:

  • Kurdish rebel leader Cemil Bayik warned Turkey to expect payback for the deadly clashes that have raged following the collapse of a fragile truce, in an interview published in Britain’s Times daily on Tuesday.
  • Bayik, one of the leaders of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), said to expect fighting “everywhere” and insisted its guerillas were justified in taking any course of action.
  • The shaky truce between Turkey and Kurdish autonomists collapsed last July, and hundreds of people have since lost their lives.
  • Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said on Monday that the evidence so far pointed to Kurdish rebels being behind a suicide car bombing in Ankara on Sunday that killed 35 people and two suspected attackers, although nobody has taken responsibility.

LONDON, Monday

Kurdish rebel leader Cemil Bayik warned Turkey to expect payback for the deadly clashes that have raged following the collapse of a fragile truce, in an interview published in Britain’s Times daily on Tuesday.

Bayik, one of the leaders of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), said to expect fighting “everywhere” and insisted its guerillas were justified in taking any course of action.

“The Turks looted and burnt everything they could in the Kurdish cities on which curfews were imposed,” said the 65-year-old in an interview The Times said took place a few days ago in the Qandil Mountains.

“So now our people are full of feelings of vengeance, calling on our guerrillas to avenge them. This is a new era of the people’s struggle.”

The shaky truce between Turkey and Kurdish autonomists collapsed last July, and hundreds of people have since lost their lives.

CAR BOMB

Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said on Monday that the evidence so far pointed to Kurdish rebels being behind a suicide car bombing in Ankara on Sunday that killed 35 people and two suspected attackers, although nobody has taken responsibility.

“At this moment in the struggle, anything our guerrillas are ordered to do will be legitimate,” said Bayik, speaking before the bombing.

“Until recently the war with the Turkish army occurred just in the mountains. Then it moved to towns and cities. Now there will be fighting everywhere,” he added.

The rebel leader said that relations with Turkey were at their lowest ebb in the PKK’s 32-year history and that the party was locked in a battle for survival with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

“Our fight is now existential: to be or not to be,” he said. “If Erdogan defeats us, then he can defeat everyone in Turkey who wants democracy, so our main aim now is the fall of Erdogan.”

Bayik claimed that his status as one of Turkey’s most wanted men meant “I am on the right path, and doing what is right for the struggle of my people.”

“The Turks have tried many times to eliminate me, but haven’t had a result as yet,” he told the newspaper.

The PKK, which launched an insurgency against the Turkish state in 1984, is fighting for greater autonomy and rights for the country’s largest ethnic minority.