Saturday, August 21, 2010

Kurds Targeted in Australia Terrorism Raids
SYDNEY (AFP) -- Australian authorities raided properties in three states Thursday in connection with the financing of extremist groups, with Kurds claiming they were being targeted.
The Australian Federal Police (AFP) conducted stings in Sydney, Melbourne and Perth, including the community clubhouse of the Kurdish Association of Victoria.
"(The raids were) part of a joint counter-terrorism investigation into allegations of financing of a terrorist organisation," the AFP said in a statement.
"The community can be assured that this investigation is not related to any terrorist related threat or incident."
The AFP refused to comment further because it was an "ongoing operational matter". No arrests were made.
But Kurdish community spokesman Twana Nwri said similar raids had been carried out around the world targeting the militant Kurdish separatist group PKK, following pressure from the Turkish government.
The PKK is a banned terrorist organisation in Australia.
"The Turkish government has lobbied European governments to ban Kurdish groups and they have lobbied the Australian government to put Kurds on the terrorist list," Nwri told the AAP news agency.
"I have spoken to (a) member of the Kurdish Association and he says they are very shocked at the raids," he added.
"They haven't raised funds for the PKK -- their association doesn't do the activities they have been accused of."
The PKK was believed to be behind an attack on an oil pipeline in southeastern Turkey earlier this month which killed two people.
Listed as a terrorist group by Turkey and much of the international community, the PKK took up arms for self-rule in the Kurdish-majority southeast in 1984, sparking a conflict that has claimed around 45,000 lives.
It has stepped up attacks significantly since its jailed leader Abdullah Ocalan declared in May that he was abandoning efforts to seek dialogue with Ankara.

No comments:

Post a Comment