Turkey’s Kurdish leader confirms allegation of Islamic State plot against him

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Selahattin Demirtas, co-chair of the pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party HDP
Selahattin Demirtas, co-chair of the pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party HDP. Photo: HDP’s FB

ISTANBUL,— Pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) Co-chairman Selahattin Demirtas has confirmed the allegations that a group of militants affiliated with the Islamic State (IS) recently infiltrated Turkey aiming to assassinate him.

“We received intelligence from reliable sources that there were plans to plot an assassination against me. We have tried to tighten security and of course share this information with the authorities. But it [the government] is busy protecting IS rather than us,” Demirtas told the press on Wednesday.

According to several media outlets, HDP Deputy Chairman İdris Baluken submitted a petition to the Interior Ministry on Aug. 5 which claimed that a group of militants affiliated with IS infiltrated Turkey aiming to assassinate Demirtas.

In the petition, the HDP stated: “According to reliable sources, a group of militants from IS entered Turkey in order to assassinate our co-chairman, Selahattin Demirtas. Currently we do not have any further information regarding the identities of the militants. Thanking you in advance for your attention to this matter.”

The Interior Ministry has reportedly failed to respond to the HDP’s petition.

Reporter who foresaw Ankara bombings: IS will assassinate Demirtas

Terrorist organization IS is plotting an assassination against HDP Co-chairman Demirtas, according to Hikmet Durgun, a reporter for Russian news agency Sputnik who foresaw the twin bomb blasts that killed at least 97 people in Ankara on Saturday, in tweets he posted a few days before the attacks took place.

“IS is going to assassinate Selehattin Demirtas in order to get revenge for Kobani. The militant assigned this duty was sent to Turkey,” Durgun tweeted on Wednesday.

What makes his tweet important is that Durgun reported on Sept. 29 that a total of 100 militants had infiltrated Turkey to carry out attacks in major provinces including Ankara and İstanbul and to give military training to IS members and sympathizers in Turkey.

The reporter also wrote that 100 militants had dispersed to the provinces of Adana, Adıyaman, Ankara, Diyarbakır, Gaziantep, İstanbul, İzmir, Kilis, Konya and Şanlıurfa after crossing Turkey’s border from Syria in groups. The militants were instructed to avoid unnecessary communication by phone. In addition to arms training, IS members and sympathizers in Turkey will also be taught to make bombs.

Durgun complained in a tweet he posted on Tuesday night that even though he reported the Ankara attack would take place, officials failed to take any security measures.

“I reported the infiltration of 100 IS militants into Turkey. But no security measure was taken. Terrifying! The IS threat still continues. I will continue to tweet about threats,” Durgun said.

A total of 97 people were officially pronounced dead on Sunday night, having lost their lives in the country’s deadliest terrorist attack in Ankara on Saturday. Over 500 people are among the injured, with dozens of them in critical condition. Initial indications suggest that IS is responsible for the twin bombings, two senior Turkish security sources told Reuters on Sunday.

The AK Party administration had long been criticized for allegedly turning a blind eye to the passage of foreign fighters, many coming from European countries, to war-torn Syria with intentions to join IS. Ignoring warnings from many experts that a lack of border security might one day spell trouble for Turkey, the AK Party government has long maintained its policy of neglecting the necessary measures of precaution at Turkey’s borders.

When a bomb attack shocked Turkey in the southeastern border town of Suruç on July 20, the AK Party shifted its stance regarding IS, which was held responsible for the attack that killed 34 civilians who were on their way to reconstruct a city that had been ravaged by the terrorist group.

Within a week of the Suruç bombing, Turkey agreed to grant the US expanded access to İncirlik Air Base, located in the southeastern province of Adana, close to Syria. By late August, Turkey had joined the air strikes being conducted on important IS targets in part of a US-led coalition, which Turkey had previously declined to participate in.

Copyright ©, respective author or news agency, cihan.com.tr

 

Kamaran Dara
Kamaran Dara
A group of editors from around the world.

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