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Kurdish fighters claim responsibility for attacking Turkish arms company

Kurdish fighters claim responsibility for attacking Turkish arms company

On Friday, a banned Kurdish militant group claimed responsibility for an attack on the headquarters of a key defense company in Ankara that killed at least five people.

A statement from the military wing of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, PKK, said Wednesday’s attack on the headquarters of aerospace and defense company TUSAS was carried out by two members of its so-called “Immortality Battalion” in response to Turkish “massacres.” and other activities in Kurdish regions.

A man and a woman stormed the TUSAS headquarters on the outskirts of Ankara, planting explosives and opening fire. Four TUSAS employees died there. The attackers arrived at the scene in a taxi, which they commandeered, killing its driver.

The attackers were also killed in the subsequent battle with security teams, and more than 20 people were injured in the attack. Turkiye blamed the attack on the PKK and immediately launched a series of airstrikes against places and facilities suspected of being used by the militant group in northern Iraq or its affiliates in northern Syria.

The attack on TUSAS came as signs grew of a possible new attempt at dialogue to end the more than four-decade conflict between the PKK and the Turkiye military.

Earlier this week, the leader of a far-right nationalist party in Turkiye, allied with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, raised the possibility that Abdullah Ocalan, the imprisoned PKK leader, could be granted parole if he renounced violence and disbanded his organization.

Ocalan, who is serving a life sentence on a prison island near Istanbul, said Thursday in a message from his nephew that he is ready to work for peace.

However, the PKK’s military wing, the People’s Defense Center, said the attack was unrelated to the latest “political agenda”, saying it had been planned well in advance.

It said TUSAS was targeted because weapons produced there “have killed thousands of civilians, including children and women, in Kurdistan.”

TUSAS designs, manufactures and assembles civil and military aircraft, unmanned aerial vehicles and other defense and space industry systems. Its defense systems are believed to have played a key role in Turkiye gaining the upper hand in the fight against Kurdish fighters.

On Friday, an Iraqi security official said Turkish warplanes had intensified airstrikes on facilities belonging to the PKK and other loyal forces in the Sinjar district of northern Iraq. Intense bombing targeted tunnels, headquarters and military posts of the Workers’ Party and the Sinjar Protection Units in the Sinjar Mountain area.

A local official and a security official said five Yazidis were killed in the attacks. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity in line with regulations.

The Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces said on Thursday that Turkish warplanes and drones struck bakeries, a power plant, oil facilities and local police checkpoints. At least 12 civilians were killed and 25 others injured. A statement from the People’s Defense Center said there were no casualties among PKK fighters in the airstrikes.

Meanwhile, police in Istanbul detained at least 35 people suspected of links to the PKK, state-run Anadolu Agency reported.

The PKK is fighting for autonomy in southeastern Turkiye in a conflict that has killed tens of thousands of people since the 1980s. Turkiye and its Western allies consider it a terrorist group.