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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Background  





2 Belligerents  



2.1  Turkish military and affiliates  





2.2  PKK and affiliates  







3 2015 timeline  



3.1  July  



3.1.1  Suruç bombing and suspected Turkish ISIL retaliations  





3.1.2  Operation Martyr Yalçın against PKK  





3.1.3  Operations Arslan Kulaksız and Hamza Yıldırım  







3.2  August  





3.3  September  





3.4  October  





3.5  November  





3.6  December  







4 2016 timeline  



4.1  January  





4.2  February  





4.3  March  





4.4  April  





4.5  May  





4.6  June  





4.7  July  





4.8  August  





4.9  September  





4.10  October  





4.11  November  





4.12  December  







5 2017 timeline[335]  



5.1  January  





5.2  February  





5.3  March  





5.4  April  





5.5  May  





5.6  June  





5.7  July  





5.8  August  





5.9  September  





5.10  October  





5.11  November  





5.12  December  







6 2018 timeline[335]  



6.1  January  





6.2  February  





6.3  March  





6.4  April  





6.5  May  





6.6  June  





6.7  July  





6.8  August  





6.9  September  





6.10  October  





6.11  November  





6.12  December  







7 2019 timeline  



7.1  January  





7.2  March  





7.3  April  





7.4  May  





7.5  June  





7.6  July  





7.7  August  





7.8  September  





7.9  October  





7.10  November  





7.11  December  







8 2020 timeline  



8.1  January  





8.2  February  





8.3  March  





8.4  April  





8.5  May  





8.6  June  





8.7  July  





8.8  August  





8.9  September  





8.10  October  





8.11  November  







9 2021 timeline  



9.1  January  





9.2  February  





9.3  March  





9.4  April  





9.5  May  





9.6  September  







10 2022 timeline  



10.1  April  





10.2  May  





10.3  June  







11 2023 timeline  



11.1  February  





11.2  April  





11.3  July  





11.4  August  





11.5  September  





11.6  October  





11.7  November  





11.8  December  







12 2024 timeline  



12.1  January  





12.2  February  





12.3  March  





12.4  April  





12.5  May  





12.6  June  







13 Impact  



13.1  Civilian impact  





13.2  Internal reactions  



13.2.1  Academics petition  





13.2.2  Resignation of UNESCO Ambassador  







13.3  Protests in New York  





13.4  U.S. State Department 2016 Human Rights Report  







14 International reactions  





15 See also  





16 References  



16.1  Bibliography  
















Timeline of the Kurdistan Workers' Party insurgency (2015present)






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

(Redirected from 2015 Turkish air raids on Kandil)

Kurdish–Turkish conflict (2015–present)
Part of the Kurdistan Workers' Party insurgency, Kurdish–Turkish conflict and the Spillover of the Syrian civil war
Date24 July 2015 – present
(8 years, 11 months, 2 weeks and 4 days)
Location
Eastern and Southeastern Turkey, Northern Syria, Northern Iraq
For a map, see here
Status

Ongoing

  • Uprising suppressed in Turkey.
  • Start of Turkish major intervention in Syria against YPG militants.
Belligerents
 Turkey

Kurdistan Communities Union (KCK)

YDG-H:

PURM
Kurdistan Freedom Hawks
Commanders and leaders
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan
Yaşar Güler (since 10 July 2018)
Hulusi Akar (from 18 August 2015 to 10 July 2018)
Necdet Özel (until 18 August 2015)
Mirad Qarayîlan
Bahoz Erdal
Cemil Bayık
Hülya Eroğlu[1]  (senior council member)
Ayfer Kordu[2]  (senior council member)
Units involved

Turkish Armed Forces

Turkish National Police

Village Guards


Other forces:
Grey Wolves[3]

PKK

PJAK
YDG-H

HBDH
Strength
Around 10,000 Turkish police and military personnel[4]
360,000 active military personnel[5]
244,000 Police forces[6][7]
(2015 figures, of which not all are directly involved)
233,000 Security Guards[6]
54,000 Village Guards[8]
4,000–33,000[9][10]
Less than 180 left inside Turkey (per Turkey's Ministry of the Internal Affairs)[11]
Casualties and losses
1,481 security forces killed (per the Crisis Group)[12]
1,129 security forces killed (per Turkey; as of Sept. 2020)[13]
7,000-9,000 security forces killed (per PKK; as of Jan. 2017)[14][15][16][17]

4,639 only HPG/PKK killed

militants killed (per the Crisis Group)[12]
27,584+ militants killed or captured (per Turkey, includes Syrian civil war and North Iraq Turkey-Pkk conflict)[18]
1,181 militants killed (per PKK; as of Jan. 2017)[14][15][17]
622 Kurdish civilians killed (per the Crisis Group)[12]
226 unidentified killed (civilians or militants; per the Crisis Group)[12]
6,535 civilians killed (per Turkey)[19]
500–1,000 civilians killed (per HDP)[20]
2,000 killed in total (per UN; as of March 2017)[21]
500,000 displaced (per the Crisis Group)[22]

In late July 2015, the third phase of the Kurdish–Turkish conflict between various Kurdish insurgent groups and the Turkish government erupted, following a failed two and a half year-long peace process aimed at resolving the long-running conflict.

The conflict between Turkey and the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) broke out again in summer 2015 following two-year-long peace negotiations. These began in late 2012, but failed to progress in light of the growing tensions on the Turkish-Syrian border in late 2014, when the Turkish state prevented its Kurdish citizens from sending support to the People's Protection Units (YPG) who were fighting against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) during the Siege of Kobani. Turkey was accused of assisting the Islamic State during the siege,[23][better source needed] resulting in the widespread 2014 Kurdish riots in Turkey involving dozens of fatalities.

In November 2015, Turkish authorities said that a number of towns and areas in the Eastern Anatolia Region had come under the control of PKK militants and affiliated armed organizations. According to Turkish government sources, between July 2015 and May 2016, 2,583 Kurdish insurgents were killed in Turkey and 2,366 in Iraq, as well as 483 members of the Turkish security forces.[24] The PKK said 1,557 Turkish security forces members were killed in 2015 during the clashes in Turkish and Iraqi Kurdistan, while it lost 220 fighters.[25] According to the International Crisis Group, 4,310 people, including 465 civilians, were killed in Turkey between July 2015 and December 2018,[12] including Kurdish lawyer Tahir Elçi.[26] In March 2017, the United Nations voiced "concern" over the Turkish government's operations and called for an independent assessment of the "massive destruction, killings and numerous other serious human rights violations" against the ethnic Kurdish minority.[27]

Since 2016, the Turkish military and Syrian National Army have conducted operations against the Syrian Democratic Forces, leading to the Turkish occupation of northern Syria.[28][29][30][31]

In May 2022, the conflict gained global geopolitical significance as Turkey opposed the accession of Finland and Sweden into NATO, accusing them of supporting the PKK.[32]

Background[edit]

The Kurdish-Turkish peace process saw negotiations begin between jailed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) leader Abdullah Ocalan and the Turkish government in late 2012. A ceasefire was called, and the PKK agreed to withdraw from Turkish Kurdistan into Iraqi Kurdistan.[33] In 2014, anger increased among Turkish Kurds with what they saw as the Turkish state's facilitation of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant's assault on Syrian Kurds during the Rojava–Islamist conflict,[34] culminating in the 2014 Kurdish riots in Turkey during the Siege of Kobanî. The June 2015 Turkish general election saw Turkey's ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) lose its majority, and gains for the Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP). Tensions increased further after the Suruç bombing and Ceylanpınar incident in July, after which the Turkish government launched the 2015 police raids in Turkey and attacked PKK positions in Iraq, prompting the PKK to call off its ceasefire.[35][36]

Belligerents[edit]

Turkish military and affiliates[edit]

Turkish Forces consisting of Turkish Land Forces troops, Gendarmerie operatives and Police Special Operations teams are backed by the rest of the Turkish Armed Forces. They are supported by a system of "village guards" which represent a feudal part of Turkey.[37] There have been recurring reports of the resurfacing Jitem "military police intelligence and anti-terrorist service" which had been responsible for massacres in the 1990s, and of irregular foreign jihadists, being employed.[38]

In 2016 the Turkish government of president Recep Tayyip Erdogan and the Justice and Development Party (AKP) were increasingly portraying the party they oppose as an enemy of an "islamic order", referring to the PKK and its affiliates and supporters as "atheists and Zoroastrians".[39][40][41]

PKK and affiliates[edit]

In 2008, according to information provided by the Intelligence Resource Program of the Federation of American Scientists the strength of the organization in terms of human resources consists of approximately 4,000 to 5,000 militants of whom 3,000 to 3,500 are located in northern Iraq.[42] With the new wave of fighting from 2015 onward, observers said that active support for the PKK had become a "mass phenomenon" in majority ethnic Kurdish cities in the Southeast of the Republic of Turkey, with large numbers of local youth joining PKK-affiliated local militant groups.[43]

According to Turkish estimates the PKK has a much larger size than the previously stated size standing at over 32,800 active fighters spanning across north-western Syria, south-eastern Turkey, northern Iraq and north-western Iran concentrated on the Qandil mountain range.[44]

PKK bases remain active in Northern Iraq and its leadership suspected in the Qandil Mountains in Iraq and Iran.[45][46] From the traditional preceding Turkish-PKK conflicts the PKK insurgency has transitioned into urban warfare in the country's densely populated south east.[47]

2015 timeline[edit]

Leyla İmret, a former mayor of Cizre, and German politician Cem Özdemir, 15 September 2015

July[edit]

Suruç bombing and suspected Turkish ISIL retaliations[edit]

On 20 July 2015, a bombing in the predominantly Kurdish district of Suruç, reportedly perpetrated by the Dokumacılar group linked to the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), killed 32 young activists and injured over 100. Most victims were members of the Socialist Party of the Oppressed (ESP) Youth Wing and the Socialist Youth Associations Federation (SGDF), university-aged students who were giving a press statement on their planned trip to reconstruct the Syrian border town of Kobanî in the de facto autonomous Federation of Northern Syria - Rojava.[48][49]

Operation Martyr Yalçın against PKK[edit]

The 21 and 22 July attacks were proclaimed a casus belli by the Turkish government, which resulted in Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu taking the decision to begin active air operations against PKK positions in Iraq. This was internationally perceived as the end of the ceasefire period in the Kurdish-Turkish conflict.[55][56][57] The New York Times assessed that "the Iraq raids, which began late Friday and continued into Saturday, effectively ended an unstable two-year cease-fire between the Turkish government and the Kurdish militants, also known by the initials of their Kurdish name, PKK".[58]

Operations Arslan Kulaksız and Hamza Yıldırım[edit]

Turkish Forces on 26 July reportedly again attacked the same village west of Kobani targeting Kurdish People's Protection Units (YPG) fighters, and fired on a YPG vehicle west of Tell Abyad.[62]

August[edit]

September[edit]

The Turkish police used "Armenian" as an insult to refer to the Kurdish people in Cizre and Burhan Kuzu, a senior adviser to the President of Turkey, said that PKK members were uncircumcised implying that they were Armenians.[98]

October[edit]

November[edit]

December[edit]

2016 timeline[edit]

January[edit]

A Police officer was killed in Sur.[citation needed] A Soldier and one civilian was killed in Silopi[119][120] A Turkish tank malfunctioned and was damaged in Cizre.[121] A total of 18 were killed that day.

February[edit]

The government held both the YPG and PKK responsible for the attack, even after the TAK claimed responsibility. It was later confirmed by DNA reports that the perpetrator was a TAK militant.[157][158][159]

March[edit]

April[edit]

May[edit]

June[edit]

July[edit]

August[edit]

September[edit]

October[edit]

November[edit]

December[edit]

2017 timeline[335][edit]

January[edit]

February[edit]

March[edit]

Overall, 92 people died, including 82 PKK militants 8 security forces personnel and 2 civilians.

April[edit]

May[edit]

June[edit]

July[edit]

August[edit]

September[edit]

October[edit]

November[edit]

December[edit]

2018 timeline[335][edit]

January[edit]

Protest in London against Turkish military operation in Afrin, 31 March 2018

February[edit]

March[edit]

April[edit]

May[edit]

June[edit]

July[edit]

August[edit]

Overall, 72 people were killed, including 58 PKK militants, 12 security personnel and two civilians.[335]

September[edit]

SDF-controlled territory (green) and Turkish-occupied territory (red) in December 2018

October[edit]

Overall, 30 people were killed, including 15 PKK militants, 13 security personnel and two civilians.

November[edit]

December[edit]

2019 timeline[edit]

January[edit]

March[edit]

April[edit]

May[edit]

June[edit]

July[edit]

August[edit]

September[edit]

October[edit]

November[edit]

December[edit]

2020 timeline[edit]

January[edit]

Overall, 7 people died, including 2 PKK militants and 5 security forces.[335]

February[edit]

Overall, 5 people died, including 4 PKK militants and 1 civilian.[335]

March[edit]

Overall, 9 people died, including 5 PKK militants, 2 security forces and 2 civilians.[335]

April[edit]

Overall, 19 people died, including 11 PKK militants, 2 security forces and 6 civilians.[335]

May[edit]

Overall, 39 people died, including 29 PKK militants, 5 security forces and 5 civilians.[335]

June[edit]

Overall, 54 people died, including 46 PKK militants, 4 security forces and 4 civilians.[335]

July[edit]

Overall, 41 people died, including 33 PKK militants, 6 security forces and 2 civilians.[335]

August[edit]

Overall, 53 people died, including 44 PKK militants, 7 security forces and 2 civilians.[335]

September[edit]

Overall, 39 people died, including 31 PKK militants, 7 security forces and 1 civilian.[335]

October[edit]

On 26 October, two PKK militants ambushed the policeinİskenderun and one of them detonated the bombs on him, injuring 1 police officer and 2 civilians.[372][373]

Overall, 12 people died, including 7 PKK militants, 2 security forces and 3 civilians.[335]

November[edit]

Overall, 9 people died, including 3 PKK militants, 1 security force and 5 civilians.[335]

2021 timeline[edit]

January[edit]

February[edit]

March[edit]

April[edit]

May[edit]

September[edit]

On September 11, a Turkish soldier was killed and another was injured during a PKK attack on a Turkish military vehicle in the 'Operation Pence-Simsek' zone.[410]

2022 timeline[edit]

April[edit]

May[edit]

June[edit]

2023 timeline[edit]

February[edit]

April[edit]

July[edit]

August[edit]

September[edit]

October[edit]

November[edit]

December[edit]

2024 timeline[edit]

January[edit]

February[edit]

March[edit]

April[edit]

May[edit]

June[edit]

Impact[edit]

Civilian impact[edit]

Cizre ruins in March 2016
Protest in London, 31 March 2018

According to Turkish Human Rights Foundation, there have been 52 intermittent curfews in seven predominantly Kurdish towns where 1.3 million people live, sometimes lasting as long as 14 days. The organization puts the civilian death toll since the summer of 2015 at 124.[452] The situation in the South-East has little coverage in the Turkish media. The authorities have enforced a blockade over the region and have shut down both cell phone coverage and the internet. Hundreds of houses, dozens of schools and official buildings have been damaged by artillery and gun fire from militants,[453] and civilians have been reportedly fired at. Turkish Forces have used measures like tank fire to clear out bomb-trapped barricades which lead to damage of residential buildings.[454] It is estimated that more than 200,000 people have been displaced. According to the HRW, civilian death toll is around 100. Diyarbakir branch of the Human Rights Association said Turkish Armed Forces and Gendarmerie was targeting civilians under the pretext of fighting terrorism.[455] Many residents in the southeastern cities have been trapped without food or electricity as clashes between Kurdish militants and Turkish security forces have intensified. In December 2015, town of Cizre, was under curfew for more than two weeks, with mounting civilian casualties. According to a teacher from the district of Silopi, some residential buildings were damaged by tank shells.[456]

Internal reactions[edit]

Academics petition[edit]

On 11 January 2016, more than 1000 scholars and academics from 90 Turkish Universities and abroad signed a petition entitled "We won't be a party to this crime,"[457] calling for an end to the government's crackdown on the Kurdish activists and politicians, and a resumption of the peace process. They also criticized the use of tanks in urban centers calling it a deliberate massacre of Kurdish people.[458] On 12 January, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan sharply criticized the dissident academics which included David Harvey, Immanuel Wallerstein, Slavoj Žižek and Noam Chomsky and said they were from the fifth column of foreign powers.[459] He also called on the Turkish judiciary to move against the "treachery". All 1,228 Turkish signatories were subsequently placed under investigation.[457] Erdoğan invited Chomsky to visit the area in a televised speech to a conference of Turkish ambassadors in Ankara. However Chomsky rejected the offer and said: "If I decide to go to Turkey, it will not be on his invitation, but as frequently before at the invitation of the many courageous dissidents, including Kurds who have been under severe attack for many years." He also said Erdoğan was aiding ISIS and the al-Nusra Front.[460] On 14 January, the Düzce University in northwest Turkey dismissed an associate sociology professor after she signed the declaration and on 15 January Erdoğan attacked the signatories again, said they were supporting the Kurdish militants and said " having a PhD title doesn't necessarily make you an intellectual. These are people in the dark. They are cruel and despicable."[461] That same day, Turkish authorities arrested 14 signatories, including 12 academics from Kocaeli University, said they were spreading "terrorism propaganda" and of insulting the state.[462] U.S. Ambassador John Bass released a statement expressing his concern regarding the arrests. He also said "Expressions of concern about violence do not equal support for terrorism. Criticism of government does not equal treason."[463] On 16 January, main opposition leader Kemal Killicdaroglu sharply criticized Erdoğan over detention of dissident academics and called him a dictator. Two days later, lawyers for Turkish President filed a lawsuit against him and a prosecutor from the Ankara prosecutors' office also launched an investigation into his comments on charges of "openly insulting the president", a crime punishable by up to four years in jail.[464][465]

Resignation of UNESCO Ambassador[edit]

On 25 May 2016, Turkish author and poet Zülfü Livaneli resigned as Turkey's only UNESCO goodwill ambassador. In his post on Twitter, he said "UNESCO's silence on human rights violations and lack of fundamental freedoms." and he also refused to take part in the World Humanitarian Summit in Istanbul. He highlighted destruction of the historical Sur district of Diyarbakir as his main reason for resignation.[466]

When [Kurdish region] Sur's historical heritage is being destroyed, I can't with a straight face urge people to protect the historical heritage of Istanbul

Protests in New York[edit]

On 31 March 2016, during a public speech by Erdoğan at the Brookings Institution, his supporters and opponents clashed outside the venue. His security guards assaulted Brooking's employees and ordered a well-known Turkish journalist, Amberin Zaman, to leave, calling her a "P.K.K. whore". Security staff members had to stop the guards from removing other journalists from inside the auditorium. Some Turkish guards were restrained by police officers.[467] National Press Club released a statement and expressed alarm at the events.[468]

Turkey's leader and his security team are guests in the United States. They have no right to lay their hands on reporters or protesters or anyone else for that matter, when the people they are apparently roughing up seemed to be merely doing their jobs or exercising the rights they have in this country.

U.S. State Department 2016 Human Rights Report[edit]

According to the report, in February 2016, Turkish security forces killed at least 130 people, including unarmed civilians, who had taken shelter in the basements of three buildings in the town of Cizre. A domestic NGO, The Human Rights Association (HRA), said the security forces killed more than 300 civilians in the first eight months of 2016. It also reported retrieval of 171 bodies from three basements in Cizre after 5 February. The Human Rights Foundation of Turkey (HRF), reported that during the 79 day curfew in Cizre, close to 200 people were killed. On 3 March 2016, HRF's president, Șebnem Korur Fincanci, found a human jawbone in the remains of a basement in the Sur district of Diyarbakir, where according to HRA seven people were killed in February 2016.[469]

International reactions[edit]

Respect for human rights has deteriorated at an alarming speed in recent months in the context of Turkey's fight against terrorism.

Protest in Berlin against Turkey's military offensive on 10 October 2019

There is a need to restart the Kurdish peace process. The European Union recognizes that PKK is a terrorist organization, but there is a need to re-engage from the Turkish authorities' side with the Kurdish political representatives and the ones that express their position in a peaceful way.

The European Parliament has been highly critical with respect to human rights abuses and denial of political dialogue with respect to the Kurdish issue under the cloak of fight against terrorism in Turkey.[470][473][474] The institutions of the European Union have persistently criticized the broad application of anti-terror legislation as well as a criminal law against "denigrating Turkishness" in Turkey as stifling peaceful advocacy for Kurdish rights.[475][476]

Fighting against the PKK and defending itself against the PKK is Turkey's most natural right. However, according to the German federal government's conviction, this problem can reach a final and permanent result only on a political platform.

Conflict in Turkey's south-east has often reflected on Germany's Turkish and Kurdish minorities causing mass riots and the build up of ethnic tensions within Germany.[477]

Joint press conference by NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg and Turkish minister of foreign affairs Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu, 11 October 2019

We understand that it is difficult for current Turkish leadership to abandon attempts to explain their domestic problems by certain external factors. With the civil conflict with the Kurdish population unremitting, President Erdogan has not found a better justification for toughening the punitive operations in the [Kurdish-populated] southeast than to accuse Russia of supplying arms to the Kurdistan Workers' Party.

Let me emphasize that we condemn PKK terrorism absolutely. But we don't just make statements – we are also actively clamping down on PKK financing in the U.K., and doing our utmost to disrupt their international network and operations.

"More and more information has been emerging from a variety of credible sources about the actions of security forces in the town of Cizre during the extended curfew there from mid-December until early March," he said in a press release. "Most disturbing of all are the reports quoting witnesses and relatives in Cizre which suggest that more than 100 people were burned to death as they sheltered in three different basements that had been surrounded by security forces."

However, the Turkish foreign ministry offered an open invitation to U.N. agencies to visit the country's southeastern provinces after the reports were made and refuted those statements, saying they were "based on insufficient information".[483] According to the UN Commissioner, unarmed civilians, including women and children, were shot by government snipers in the south-east during the clashes and Turkish forces also inflicted significant damage on the local infrastructure.[484] Turkish sources, whose reports were confirmed by the Turkey's foreign ministry had said in late 2015 that the PKK were hiring foreign national snipers to target civilians and high ranking Military personnel in the same region.[485]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "PKK militant on Turkey's 'most-wanted list' killed in southeast: Interior Ministry". Hürriyet Daily News. Anadolu. 14 November 2017. Retrieved 6 June 2021.
  • ^ "Turkey neutralizes most-wanted PKK terrorist in N Iraq". Hürriyet Daily News. 7 October 2019. Retrieved 7 October 2019.
  • ^ "Increasing tensions see resurgence of Turkey's far-right street movements". Middle East Eye. Retrieved 1 May 2016.
  • ^ Kuntz, Katrin; Belli, Onur Burçak; Oezmen, Emin (12 February 2016). "The Growing Intensity of Turkey's Civil War". Der Spiegel. De Spiegel.
  • ^ [1] TSK'daki asker sayısı açıklandı
  • ^ a b "233 bin özel güvenlik 244 bin polis var - Güngör Uras". Milliyet.com.tr. Retrieved 2 December 2016.
  • ^ "İşte TSK'nın personel mevcudu". Hürriyet Haber. 3 October 2015.
  • ^ "Türkiye Son 3 Yılda Korucu Sayısını 54 Bine Çıkardı". Amerika'nin Sesi | Voice of America - Turkish (in Turkish). 13 November 2019. Retrieved 1 March 2021.
  • ^ "Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK)". fas.org.
  • ^ "The PKK In Numbers". Sabah. 28 December 2015.
  • ^ "Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) numbers per Suleyman Soylu Ministry of the Internal Affairs". Anadolu Agency. 22 December 2021.
  • ^ a b c d e "Turkey's PKK Conflict: The Rising Toll". 3 February 2022. Retrieved 17 February 2022.
  • ^ Şener, Nedim (4 September 2020). "PKK'nın kanlı bilançosu". hurriyet.com.tr (in Turkish). Hürriyet. Retrieved 4 September 2020.
  • ^ a b News, ANF. "Detained and missing for 46 days". Archived from the original on 2017-08-16. Retrieved 19 April 2017. {{cite web}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  • ^ a b "PKK says 3,404 Turkish troops, 585 Kurdish fighters killed in 2016". 3 January 2017. Retrieved 19 April 2017.
  • ^ "War in Northern Kurdistan: YPS releases balance sheet of one year - ANHA". Archived from the original on 28 September 2017. Retrieved 19 April 2017.
  • ^ a b "PKK claims killing 7,000 Turkish soldiers". Kurdistan24.net. Retrieved 5 January 2019.
  • ^ "29 terrorists 'neutralized' in northern Syria - Turkey News". Hürriyet Daily News. 12 February 2022. Retrieved 17 February 2022. A total of 27,584 terrorists have been neutralized inside the country, Iraq and northern Syria since July 2015, she said.
  • ^ "Around 100 civilians killed in PKK attacks across Turkey". Retrieved 30 November 2017.
  • ^ Cakan, Seyhmus (17 May 2016). "Turkey identifies 13 more dead from bomb blast in Kurdish village, clashes flare". Reuters.
  • ^ "2,000 killed in southeast Turkey over 18 months: United Nations". WION. 10 March 2017.
  • ^ "The Human Cost of the PKK Conflict in Turkey: The Case of Sur - International Crisis Group". Crisisgroup.org. 17 March 2016. Retrieved 2016-05-27.
  • ^ "The Cost of Turkey's Self-Interest". The Huffington Post. 28 December 2015. Retrieved 10 May 2016.
  • ^ "7 bin 78 PKK'lı etkisiz hale getirildiKaynak: 7 bin 78 PKK'lı etkisiz hale getirildi". 23 May 2016. Retrieved 23 May 2016.
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  • Bibliography[edit]

  • flag Kurdistan

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