Iraqi parliament committee rejects direct negotiations with Turkey amid PKK operation
(last modified Mon, 07 Sep 2020 04:49:29 GMT )
Sep 07, 2020 04:49 UTC
  • Iraqi parliament committee rejects direct negotiations with Turkey amid PKK operation

The security and defense committee of Iraq’s parliament has rejected direct negotiations with Turkey over an ongoing cross-border operation in the semi-autonomous Kurdistan region against the hideouts of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK).

“Turkey’s persistence to violate Iraq’s sovereignty compels us to reject initiatives to sit with them at the negotiating table,” the Arabic-language Iraqi Media News Agency quoted the head of the committee, Mohammad Reza al-Haider, as saying on Sunday.

“For any dialogue to begin, Turkey must initially withdraw its forces from the border regions it is currently occupying, especially as Iraq does not allow its territory to be used as a launching pad for attacks on neighboring countries, as stipulated in the Constitution.”

Haider also called for an emergency meeting of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) or the Arab League, without taking into account international conventions that hinge upon the principle of good neighborliness.

Another Iraqi legislator, Katah Najman al-Rikabi, also called on Baghdad “to confront the Turkish acts of aggression through diplomatic means, such as submitting a lawsuit to the UN Security Council or the United Nations to stop them.”

The Turkish military started its ground campaign, dubbed Claw-Tiger Operation, against the PKK positions in northern Iraq on July 17. Claw-Eagle Operation, the air campaign, had begun two days earlier.

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