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Kurdistan Freedom Hawks

The Kurdistan Freedom Hawks or TAK (Kurdish: Teyrêbazên Azadiya Kurdistan), is a Kurdish nationalist militant group in Turkey seeking an independent Kurdish state in Turkish Kurdistan (eastern and southeastern Turkey). The group also opposes the Turkish government's policies towards Kurds in Turkey.

Kurdistan Freedom Hawks
Teyrêbazên Azadiya Kurdistan
Flag of the Kurdistan Freedom Hawks (TAK)
Dates of operation29 July 2004 (2004-07-29)[1] – present
Split from PKK (TAK claim)
HeadquartersUnknown
Active regionsTurkey
IdeologyKurdish nationalism
Separatism
SizeA few dozen active members (2006)[2]
Opponents Turkey
Battles and warsKurdish–Turkish conflict

The group presents itself as a break-away faction of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) in open dissent with the PKK's readiness to compromise with the Turkish state. The PKK distances itself from the TAK, stating that the Turkish government uses the TAK to portray the PKK as a terrorist organization in the international arena, that the PKK only targets the Turkish Armed Forces or their proxies, that it always takes responsibility for its attacks, and that there are no links between the PKK and TAK.[3][4] Analysts and experts disagree on whether or not the two groups are in reality linked.[5][6]

The group first appeared in August 2004, just weeks after the PKK called off the 1999 truce, assuming responsibility for two hotel bombings in Istanbul which claimed two victims.[7] Since then, TAK has followed a strategy of escalation, committing numerous violent bomb attacks throughout Turkey, with a focus on western and central Turkey, including some tourist areas in Istanbul, Ankara, and southern Mediterranean resorts.[8] TAK also claimed responsibility for the February 2016 Ankara bombing, which killed at least 28 people,[9][10] the March 2016 Ankara bombing in the same city that killed another 37 people, and the December 2016 Istanbul bombings which killed 47 people.[11][12]

Historical context

After several decades of oppressive measures by the Turkish government towards the ethnic Kurdish population of Turkey, the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) was formed in 1978 in an aim to establish equal rights and self-determination for the Kurds in Turkey, who comprise between 18% and 25% of the population.[13] Since 1984, however, an armed conflict began between the PKK and the Turkish security forces resulting in the deaths of around 7,000 Turkish security personnel and over 30,000 Kurds.[14][15] Throughout the conflict, the European Court of Human Rights has condemned Turkey for thousands of human rights abuses.[16][17]

The judgments are related to executions of Kurdish civilians,[18] torturing,[19] forced displacements,[20] destroyed villages,[21] arbitrary arrests,[22] and murdered and disappeared Kurdish journalists.[23] As a result of a brief PKK cease-fire in 2004, the Kurdistan Freedom Hawks were formed, a group that presents itself as a break-away faction of the PKK and is in open dissent with the PKK's readiness to compromise with the Turkish state. The TAK opposes, through militant action, the treatment of Kurds in Turkey and seeks retaliation for those Kurds who were killed at the hands of the Turkish government.[24]

Founding philosophy

The TAK seek an independent state of Kurdistan.[25] The group violently opposes the Turkish government's policies towards its ethnic Kurdish citizens.[26][27]

TAK first appeared in 2004. There is substantial debate on the origin, composition, and affiliations of the group. Some Turkish analysts claim that the group is either a small splinter of or an alias for the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), the most active Kurdish militant group.[28][29][30] Others suggest that the group may be totally independent of the PKK, or only loosely connected to it. PKK leaders deny having any control over the TAK. There are some indications that the TAK was founded by disgruntled or former members of the PKK.[28][31][30]

Structure

Little is known about the internal structure of the TAK. An employee of the later banned Kurdish German news agency MHA told Süddeutsche Zeitung in 2005 that representatives of the TAK would always remain anonymous and tight-lipped. The Freedom Hawks recruited a new generation of "frustrated young Kurds", raised in the Kurdish diaspora slums of Istanbul, Izmir and Ankara, after their parents had to flee the Kurdish villages depopulated by Turkey in the 1990s. Other Kurdish observers saw the Freedom Hawks as a socially disrooted youth, a new urban guerrilla born out of despair.[32]

Relationship with the PKK

According to the Jamestown Foundation, the TAK has been a rival to the PKK since 2006.[2] From then on, the group's operations have been repeatedly at odds with Murat Karayılan's and other PKK leaders' repeated calls for a ceasefire followed by negotiations.[33] However, Vera Eccarius-Kelly, a scholar of political science, has noted that there are no clear signs that indicate a struggle between the two groups. According to her, whilst TAK repeatedly damaged the PKK's efforts to negotiate cease-fires with "unapproved" bombings, in a way that has been compared to the Real IRA in the Northern Ireland conflict, the fact that there is no such struggle may have two explanations; the TAK may be operating outside the PKK's command structure, or it may be used by the PKK for "specific missions".[6] TAK's origins however remain controversial.

Some Turkish security analysts alleged that Bahoz Erdal may be the leader of TAK.[34] Other analysts believe that the group was initially formed by PKK leaders in 2003, when it engaged in illegal demonstrations, roadblocks and occasional Molotov cocktails. TAK has since claimed to have split from the PKK, accusing it of being "passive",[35] most recently in December 2015, when they criticized the PKK's "humanist character" as inept in the face of "the methods used by the existing Turkish state fascism."[36]

Some experts say that TAK is affiliated to the PKK; according to France24's correspondent in Turkey, "most" analysts share the view that whilst the TAK is affiliated to the PKK, it enjoys some operational autonomy.[37] The National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism, an academic research centre funded by the US Department of Homeland Security, describes the TAK as the "special urban terrorism wing" of the PKK.[38]

This view is shared by the White House, which called TAK the PKK's "urban terrorism wing" in October 2016.[39] According to The Guardian, "Turkish officials as well as some security analysts say TAK still acts as a militant front of the PKK".[40] Business Insider has reported that "experts who follow Kurdish militants say the groups retain ties".[41] Istanbul-based Turkish independent security analyst Metin Gürcan, writing for Al-Monitor, described TAK as "a semi-autonomous, armed outfit that carries out attacks under the PKK umbrella", saying that while the PKK ideologically and financially supports TAK, it allows it to decide on the nature and timing of its attacks.[42] Gürcan further wrote that the TAK was set up by the PKK but then split from it.[35]

Aliza Marcus, an expert on the PKK, also expressed her skepticism of the claims of separation by saying, "It would be the first time in the history of the PKK that they allow the existence of any other group representing the Kurds than themselves. In the 1990s, the PKK fought with rival Kurdish groups in Europe, it has killed dissidents within its own ranks. I see no reason why they would allow another group on the stage now."[43] Marcus believes that it is unlikely that the TAK gets direct orders from PKK but thinks that the PKK has control over TAK's actions.[44]

Newsweek and Al-Arabiya have written that the group is linked to the PKK while Deutsche Welle has described it as a breakaway from the PKK.[45][46][47] In 2012, Human Rights Watch mentioned the TAK in its January 2012 report, calling the TAK "a group linked to PKK".[48] According to Howard Eissenstat, a Turkey expert at St Lawrence University in New York, the TAK is damaging the PKK's short-term and long-term goals, and it's unlikely that the TAK is under PKK control.[44]

PKK's spokesman Serhat Varto denied a link between the PKK and the TAK in an interview by saying that the PKK targets only military entities and that it always takes responsibility for its attacks.[49] PKK leader Cemil Bayik also denied a link or any resemblance between the PKK and the TAK. He went on to claim that the Turkish government carries out attacks in the name of TAK to better characterise the PKK as a terrorist organization in the international arena.[4]

In 2015, a member of TAK denied links with the PKK, saying "The target perspectives, manner of action, and tactics pursued by the PKK and other Kurdish organisations in war have a quite 'humanist' character in the face of the methods used by the existing Turkish state fascism against the Kurdish people. In this regard, we are not dependent on the target perspectives, manner of action and tactics of these organisations. We as TAK will determine and realize our independent action strategy, tactics and manner in line with the mission we have undertaken.[50]

Designation as a terrorist organisation

The group has been designated as a terrorist organization by the US, UK and Australian governments,[51][52][53][54] as well as by the European Union.[55] The Turkish government regards the group as part of the PKK and does not list it separately.[56]

Attacks

TAK has claimed responsibility for a number of attacks against police officers, soldiers, government and business institutions since 2004. Its earliest attacks were small, non-lethal bombings in public places which the group described as "warning actions." These warnings, however, had become deadly by the summer of 2005.

  • 20 people were injured when a bomb exploded at Çeşme, a coastal resort town on July 10, 2005.
  • Less than one week later, five people were killed and more than a dozen wounded when a bus was blown up in the seaside town of Kuşadası.[57][58] This type of attack against a tourist target is perhaps the signature tactic of TAK. The group has targeted civilians to discourage tourism in Turkey by attacking targets such as hotels and ATMs. TAK claims to have no desire to kill foreigners, only that it wishes to cut off a key source of revenue for the Turkish government.[31][59][60]
  • In 2006 the group's attacks continued, including a failed plot to attack a bus carrying legal officials on April 12, 2006. Five of the group's members were arrested when the plot was broken up.
  • The group also claimed responsibility for an April 5, 2006 attack on a district office of the Justice and Development Party in Istanbul.[61]
  • In March, one person was killed and thirteen injured when TAK detonated a bomb near a bus station in Istanbul.[61]
  • On August 28, 2006, The Kurdish Freedom Hawks attacked the resort area of Marmaris with three explosions, at least two of which bombs were hidden in garbage cans.[58] In the resort city of Antalya, 20 were injured when another explosion went off and 3 were killed. A final bomb detonated in Turkey's largest city of Istanbul where more than 20 people were injured.[31][25] A separate attack is claimed to have been stopped in the port city of İzmir when a raid turned up plastic explosives.[62][63] The group's website states the rash of attacks are revenge for the imprisonment of Abdullah Ocalan, the figurehead for the armed Kurdish nationalist movement.[64]
  • On August 30, 2006, the town of Mersin was attacked via a bomb planted in a rubbish container on Inonu street, one person was injured.[65] The bombing is believed to be linked to the recent attacks by TAK, however they have not claimed responsibility.[30][66]
  • In the July 2008 bombings, the deadliest attack against civilians in Turkey since 2003, two bombs hit a shopping mile in Güngören district of Istanbul.[67]
  • In June 2010, they blew up a military bus in Istanbul, killing four people including 3 soldiers[68] and a 17-year-old girl. This was received by observers as a "resumption of guerrilla warfare" which "brings to a final end an unofficial truce between the PKK and the government, which last year launched an initiative giving Kurds greater civil rights."[68]
  • On October 31, 2010, a suicide bomber detonated a bomb on Taksim Square in Istanbul, Turkey, killing the perpetrator and resulting in 32 injuries, 15 of whom were police officers.[69] The bombing is believed to be linked to TAK, however they have not claimed responsibility.[70]
  • September 20, 2011 3 people died and 34 people were injured in a bomb attack in Ankara. Kurdistan Freedom Hawks claimed the attack.[71]
  • On December 23, 2015 Istanbul's Sabiha Gökçen International Airport was hit by mortar fire from the Kurdistan Freedom Hawks.[72]
  • On February 17, 2016, the Kurdistan Freedom Hawks attacked military buses in Ankara killing 28 Turkish military personnel and 1 civilian.[73][74][75][76] The group claimed responsibility two days later, on 19 of February.[77][78][79]
  • On March 13, 2016, a car bombing in the Kizilay district of Ankara killed 37 and injured more than 120 others. TAK claimed responsibility for the attack on March 17.[80]
  • On April 27, 2016, a suicide bomber blew herself up in the northwestern city of Bursa leaving thirteen people wounded. TAK claimed responsibility for the Bursa attack on May 1, 2016.[81]
  • On June 7, 2016, a bomb targeting a police bus in Istanbul detonated, killing seven police officers and four civilians. TAK claimed responsibility for the bomb, warning tourists that Turkey wouldn't be a safe destination any longer.[82]
  • On October 6, 2016, Kurdistan Freedom Hawks (TAK) claimed responsibility a bomb attack was carried out in İstanbul's Yenibosna district outside of police station on October 6, causing 10 civilians to get wounded.[83]
  • On November 24, 2016, TAK claimed responsibility for a car bomb attack that killed two people and wounded 30 more in the Turkish city of Adana, according to a statement on its website.
  • On December 10, 2016, a car bombing and a suicide bomber in the Beşiktaş district of Istanbul killed 46 people, of which 37 were police officers, and injured at least 160 others. TAK claimed responsibility for the attack the day after.[12]
  • On December 20, 2016, TAK claimed responsibility for Kayseri bombing which killed 14 soldiers.[84][85][86]
  • On January 11, 2017, TAK claimed responsibility for İzmir attack which killed 2 people and wounded 9 others [87]
  • On November 10, 2017 The female TAK Fighter Çiçek Karabulut was immolated with a hand grenade after a gunfight in Mardin, Mardin Province. The organization claimed this incident in a statement published on January 17, 2018.[88][89]

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Bibliography

External links

kurdistan, freedom, hawks, kurdistan, freedom, falcons, redirects, here, armed, peshmerga, units, iran, kurdistan, freedom, party, kurdish, teyrêbazên, azadiya, kurdistan, kurdish, nationalist, militant, group, turkey, seeking, independent, kurdish, state, tur. Kurdistan Freedom Falcons redirects here For the armed Peshmerga units in Iran see Kurdistan Freedom Party The Kurdistan Freedom Hawks or TAK Kurdish Teyrebazen Azadiya Kurdistan is a Kurdish nationalist militant group in Turkey seeking an independent Kurdish state in Turkish Kurdistan eastern and southeastern Turkey The group also opposes the Turkish government s policies towards Kurds in Turkey Kurdistan Freedom HawksTeyrebazen Azadiya KurdistanFlag of the Kurdistan Freedom Hawks TAK Dates of operation29 July 2004 2004 07 29 1 presentSplit fromPKK TAK claim HeadquartersUnknownActive regionsTurkeyIdeologyKurdish nationalismSeparatismSizeA few dozen active members 2006 2 Opponents TurkeyBattles and warsKurdish Turkish conflictThe group presents itself as a break away faction of the Kurdistan Workers Party PKK in open dissent with the PKK s readiness to compromise with the Turkish state The PKK distances itself from the TAK stating that the Turkish government uses the TAK to portray the PKK as a terrorist organization in the international arena that the PKK only targets the Turkish Armed Forces or their proxies that it always takes responsibility for its attacks and that there are no links between the PKK and TAK 3 4 Analysts and experts disagree on whether or not the two groups are in reality linked 5 6 The group first appeared in August 2004 just weeks after the PKK called off the 1999 truce assuming responsibility for two hotel bombings in Istanbul which claimed two victims 7 Since then TAK has followed a strategy of escalation committing numerous violent bomb attacks throughout Turkey with a focus on western and central Turkey including some tourist areas in Istanbul Ankara and southern Mediterranean resorts 8 TAK also claimed responsibility for the February 2016 Ankara bombing which killed at least 28 people 9 10 the March 2016 Ankara bombing in the same city that killed another 37 people and the December 2016 Istanbul bombings which killed 47 people 11 12 Contents 1 Historical context 2 Founding philosophy 3 Structure 4 Relationship with the PKK 5 Designation as a terrorist organisation 6 Attacks 7 References 7 1 Bibliography 8 External linksHistorical context EditAfter several decades of oppressive measures by the Turkish government towards the ethnic Kurdish population of Turkey the Kurdistan Workers Party PKK was formed in 1978 in an aim to establish equal rights and self determination for the Kurds in Turkey who comprise between 18 and 25 of the population 13 Since 1984 however an armed conflict began between the PKK and the Turkish security forces resulting in the deaths of around 7 000 Turkish security personnel and over 30 000 Kurds 14 15 Throughout the conflict the European Court of Human Rights has condemned Turkey for thousands of human rights abuses 16 17 The judgments are related to executions of Kurdish civilians 18 torturing 19 forced displacements 20 destroyed villages 21 arbitrary arrests 22 and murdered and disappeared Kurdish journalists 23 As a result of a brief PKK cease fire in 2004 the Kurdistan Freedom Hawks were formed a group that presents itself as a break away faction of the PKK and is in open dissent with the PKK s readiness to compromise with the Turkish state The TAK opposes through militant action the treatment of Kurds in Turkey and seeks retaliation for those Kurds who were killed at the hands of the Turkish government 24 Founding philosophy EditThe TAK seek an independent state of Kurdistan 25 The group violently opposes the Turkish government s policies towards its ethnic Kurdish citizens 26 27 TAK first appeared in 2004 There is substantial debate on the origin composition and affiliations of the group Some Turkish analysts claim that the group is either a small splinter of or an alias for the Kurdistan Workers Party PKK the most active Kurdish militant group 28 29 30 Others suggest that the group may be totally independent of the PKK or only loosely connected to it PKK leaders deny having any control over the TAK There are some indications that the TAK was founded by disgruntled or former members of the PKK 28 31 30 Structure EditLittle is known about the internal structure of the TAK An employee of the later banned Kurdish German news agency MHA told Suddeutsche Zeitung in 2005 that representatives of the TAK would always remain anonymous and tight lipped The Freedom Hawks recruited a new generation of frustrated young Kurds raised in the Kurdish diaspora slums of Istanbul Izmir and Ankara after their parents had to flee the Kurdish villages depopulated by Turkey in the 1990s Other Kurdish observers saw the Freedom Hawks as a socially disrooted youth a new urban guerrilla born out of despair 32 Relationship with the PKK EditAccording to the Jamestown Foundation the TAK has been a rival to the PKK since 2006 2 From then on the group s operations have been repeatedly at odds with Murat Karayilan s and other PKK leaders repeated calls for a ceasefire followed by negotiations 33 However Vera Eccarius Kelly a scholar of political science has noted that there are no clear signs that indicate a struggle between the two groups According to her whilst TAK repeatedly damaged the PKK s efforts to negotiate cease fires with unapproved bombings in a way that has been compared to the Real IRA in the Northern Ireland conflict the fact that there is no such struggle may have two explanations the TAK may be operating outside the PKK s command structure or it may be used by the PKK for specific missions 6 TAK s origins however remain controversial Some Turkish security analysts alleged that Bahoz Erdal may be the leader of TAK 34 Other analysts believe that the group was initially formed by PKK leaders in 2003 when it engaged in illegal demonstrations roadblocks and occasional Molotov cocktails TAK has since claimed to have split from the PKK accusing it of being passive 35 most recently in December 2015 when they criticized the PKK s humanist character as inept in the face of the methods used by the existing Turkish state fascism 36 Some experts say that TAK is affiliated to the PKK according to France24 s correspondent in Turkey most analysts share the view that whilst the TAK is affiliated to the PKK it enjoys some operational autonomy 37 The National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism an academic research centre funded by the US Department of Homeland Security describes the TAK as the special urban terrorism wing of the PKK 38 This view is shared by the White House which called TAK the PKK s urban terrorism wing in October 2016 39 According to The Guardian Turkish officials as well as some security analysts say TAK still acts as a militant front of the PKK 40 Business Insider has reported that experts who follow Kurdish militants say the groups retain ties 41 Istanbul based Turkish independent security analyst Metin Gurcan writing for Al Monitor described TAK as a semi autonomous armed outfit that carries out attacks under the PKK umbrella saying that while the PKK ideologically and financially supports TAK it allows it to decide on the nature and timing of its attacks 42 Gurcan further wrote that the TAK was set up by the PKK but then split from it 35 Aliza Marcus an expert on the PKK also expressed her skepticism of the claims of separation by saying It would be the first time in the history of the PKK that they allow the existence of any other group representing the Kurds than themselves In the 1990s the PKK fought with rival Kurdish groups in Europe it has killed dissidents within its own ranks I see no reason why they would allow another group on the stage now 43 Marcus believes that it is unlikely that the TAK gets direct orders from PKK but thinks that the PKK has control over TAK s actions 44 Newsweek and Al Arabiya have written that the group is linked to the PKK while Deutsche Welle has described it as a breakaway from the PKK 45 46 47 In 2012 Human Rights Watch mentioned the TAK in its January 2012 report calling the TAK a group linked to PKK 48 According to Howard Eissenstat a Turkey expert at St Lawrence University in New York the TAK is damaging the PKK s short term and long term goals and it s unlikely that the TAK is under PKK control 44 PKK s spokesman Serhat Varto denied a link between the PKK and the TAK in an interview by saying that the PKK targets only military entities and that it always takes responsibility for its attacks 49 PKK leader Cemil Bayik also denied a link or any resemblance between the PKK and the TAK He went on to claim that the Turkish government carries out attacks in the name of TAK to better characterise the PKK as a terrorist organization in the international arena 4 In 2015 a member of TAK denied links with the PKK saying The target perspectives manner of action and tactics pursued by the PKK and other Kurdish organisations in war have a quite humanist character in the face of the methods used by the existing Turkish state fascism against the Kurdish people In this regard we are not dependent on the target perspectives manner of action and tactics of these organisations We as TAK will determine and realize our independent action strategy tactics and manner in line with the mission we have undertaken 50 Designation as a terrorist organisation EditThe group has been designated as a terrorist organization by the US UK and Australian governments 51 52 53 54 as well as by the European Union 55 The Turkish government regards the group as part of the PKK and does not list it separately 56 Attacks EditTAK has claimed responsibility for a number of attacks against police officers soldiers government and business institutions since 2004 Its earliest attacks were small non lethal bombings in public places which the group described as warning actions These warnings however had become deadly by the summer of 2005 20 people were injured when a bomb exploded at Cesme a coastal resort town on July 10 2005 Less than one week later five people were killed and more than a dozen wounded when a bus was blown up in the seaside town of Kusadasi 57 58 This type of attack against a tourist target is perhaps the signature tactic of TAK The group has targeted civilians to discourage tourism in Turkey by attacking targets such as hotels and ATMs TAK claims to have no desire to kill foreigners only that it wishes to cut off a key source of revenue for the Turkish government 31 59 60 In 2006 the group s attacks continued including a failed plot to attack a bus carrying legal officials on April 12 2006 Five of the group s members were arrested when the plot was broken up The group also claimed responsibility for an April 5 2006 attack on a district office of the Justice and Development Party in Istanbul 61 In March one person was killed and thirteen injured when TAK detonated a bomb near a bus station in Istanbul 61 On August 28 2006 The Kurdish Freedom Hawks attacked the resort area of Marmaris with three explosions at least two of which bombs were hidden in garbage cans 58 In the resort city of Antalya 20 were injured when another explosion went off and 3 were killed A final bomb detonated in Turkey s largest city of Istanbul where more than 20 people were injured 31 25 A separate attack is claimed to have been stopped in the port city of Izmir when a raid turned up plastic explosives 62 63 The group s website states the rash of attacks are revenge for the imprisonment of Abdullah Ocalan the figurehead for the armed Kurdish nationalist movement 64 On August 30 2006 the town of Mersin was attacked via a bomb planted in a rubbish container on Inonu street one person was injured 65 The bombing is believed to be linked to the recent attacks by TAK however they have not claimed responsibility 30 66 In the July 2008 bombings the deadliest attack against civilians in Turkey since 2003 two bombs hit a shopping mile in Gungoren district of Istanbul 67 In June 2010 they blew up a military bus in Istanbul killing four people including 3 soldiers 68 and a 17 year old girl This was received by observers as a resumption of guerrilla warfare which brings to a final end an unofficial truce between the PKK and the government which last year launched an initiative giving Kurds greater civil rights 68 On October 31 2010 a suicide bomber detonated a bomb on Taksim Square in Istanbul Turkey killing the perpetrator and resulting in 32 injuries 15 of whom were police officers 69 The bombing is believed to be linked to TAK however they have not claimed responsibility 70 September 20 2011 3 people died and 34 people were injured in a bomb attack in Ankara Kurdistan Freedom Hawks claimed the attack 71 On December 23 2015 Istanbul s Sabiha Gokcen International Airport was hit by mortar fire from the Kurdistan Freedom Hawks 72 On February 17 2016 the Kurdistan Freedom Hawks attacked military buses in Ankara killing 28 Turkish military personnel and 1 civilian 73 74 75 76 The group claimed responsibility two days later on 19 of February 77 78 79 On March 13 2016 a car bombing in the Kizilay district of Ankara killed 37 and injured more than 120 others TAK claimed responsibility for the attack on March 17 80 On April 27 2016 a suicide bomber blew herself up in the northwestern city of Bursa leaving thirteen people wounded TAK claimed responsibility for the Bursa attack on May 1 2016 81 On June 7 2016 a bomb targeting a police bus in Istanbul detonated killing seven police officers and four civilians TAK claimed responsibility for the bomb warning tourists that Turkey wouldn t be a safe destination any longer 82 On October 6 2016 Kurdistan Freedom Hawks TAK claimed responsibility a bomb attack was carried out in Istanbul s Yenibosna district outside of police station on October 6 causing 10 civilians to get wounded 83 On November 24 2016 TAK claimed responsibility for a car bomb attack that killed two people and wounded 30 more in the Turkish city of Adana according to a statement on its website On December 10 2016 a car bombing and a suicide bomber in the Besiktas district of Istanbul killed 46 people of which 37 were police officers and injured at least 160 others TAK claimed responsibility for the attack the day after 12 On December 20 2016 TAK claimed responsibility for Kayseri bombing which killed 14 soldiers 84 85 86 On January 11 2017 TAK claimed responsibility for Izmir attack which killed 2 people and wounded 9 others 87 On November 10 2017 The female TAK Fighter Cicek Karabulut was immolated with a hand grenade after a gunfight in Mardin Mardin Province The organization claimed this incident in a statement published on January 17 2018 88 89 References Edit Terrorist Organization Profile Kurdistan Freedom Hawks Archived from the original on February 6 2011 Retrieved January 8 2011 a b James Brandon The Kurdistan Freedom Hawks Emerges as a Rival to the PKK Terrorism Focus The Jamestown Foundation 3 40 Turkce B B C PKK TAK in saldirilarini neden durdurmuyor BBC Turkce Retrieved 11 December 2016 a b Geerdink Frederike PKK co leader Cemil Bayik What are we supposed to do Surrender Never www beaconreader com Archived from the original on 2016 09 19 Retrieved 12 September 2016 After Ankara bombing questions over PKK TAK ties resurface Retrieved 18 March 2016 a b Eccarius Kelly 2011 pp 36 f Bomb in waist pack triggered Turkey blast AFP 17 July 2005 Eccarius Kelly 2011 p 35 Dolan David Feb 19 2016 Kurdish militant group TAK claims responsibility for Ankara bombing Reuters Letsch Constanze February 19 2016 Kurdish militant group Tak claims responsibility for Ankara car bomb The Guardian Ankara blast Kurdish group TAK claims bombing BBC News Archived December 14 2016 at the Wayback Machine a b Istanbul stadium attacks Kurdish TAK group claim attacks BBC News Archived December 12 2016 at Archive It Diener Alexander C Hagen Joshua 2010 Borderlines and borderlands political oddities at the edge of the nation state Lanham Md Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers p 114 ISBN 978 0742556355 Kreyenbroek Philip G Sperl Stefan eds 2005 The Kurds A Contemporary Overview Routledge p 58 ISBN 1134907664 The World Factbook Turkey EUROPEAN COURT OF HUMAN RIGHTS Turkey Ranks First in Violations in between 1959 2011 Bianet Bagimsiz Iletisim Agi Retrieved 29 December 2015 Annual report PDF The European Court of Human Rights 2014 Retrieved 29 December 2015 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help The European Court of Human Rights Case of Benzer and others v Turkey PDF Mass execution of Kurdish villagers 24 March 2014 57 Retrieved 29 December 2015 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help The prohibition of torture PDF Torturing 2003 11 13 Retrieved 29 December 2015 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Human Rights Watch HRW 2002 p 7 Abdulla Jamal Jalal 2012 02 07 The Kurds A Nation on the Way to Statehood AuthorHouse p 36 ISBN 9781467879729 Retrieved 29 December 2015 Police arrest and assistance of a lawyer PDF 2015 1 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Justice Comes from European Court for a Kurdish Journalist Kurdish Human Rights Project Retrieved 29 December 2015 Who are the Kurdistan Freedom Hawks Reuters 22 June 2010 a b Serial bomb blasts rock Turkey IBNLive 2006 08 29 Archived from the original on September 1 2006 Huggler Justin 2006 08 30 The Big Question Who is behind the bombings in Turkey and what do they want The Independent London Archived from the original on 2007 09 30 Retrieved 2010 05 07 Kurdistan Freedom Hawks MIPT Terrorism Knowledge Base Archived from the original on August 25 2006 Retrieved August 19 2006 a b Militant Kurds warn of wreaking havoc Houston Chronicle 2006 08 30 Archived from the original on 2006 09 02 Turkish blast injures woman Telegraph London 2006 08 30 Retrieved 2020 02 20 dead link a b c Blast in Turkish port wounds one officials Reuters 2006 08 30 Archived from the original on 2012 10 24 a b c Kurdish rebels say they planted Turkish resort bomb Reuters AlertNet 2006 08 29 Alexander Schwabe 30 August 2006 Kurdische Freiheitsfalken Boten der Holle Kurdistan Freedom Hawks the messengers of hell Der Spiegel in German Archived from the original on 12 October 2008 Retrieved 9 June 2016 Jonathan D Hutzley 2007 Unmasking Terror A Global Review of Terrorist Activities Volume 3 Jamestown Foundation p 130 ISBN 978 0 9675009 6 6 Archived from the original on 2011 10 02 Eccarius Kelly 2011 p 212 a b Metin Gurcan 30 December 2015 Are clashes spreading to western Turkey Al Monitor Retrieved 21 February 2016 TAK We aren t dependent on PKK our actions will spread ANF 31 December 2015 Archived from the original on 21 February 2016 Retrieved 21 February 2016 Kurdish militant group with ties to PKK claims Ankara bombing France24 2016 03 17 Retrieved 18 March 2016 Kurdistan Workers Party PKK National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism Retrieved 18 March 2016 Statement by NSC Spokesperson Ned Price on Terrorist Attacks in Turkey whitehouse gov Archived February 10 2017 at the Wayback Machine Letsch Constanze 2016 03 14 Ankara attack one of bombers was PKK member officials say The Guardian Retrieved 14 March 2016 The Kurdish TAK group has claimed responsibility for the deadly bombings in Ankara and threatened further strikes Business Insider Retrieved 18 March 2016 Gurcan Metin 2016 03 16 How terror attacks drive politics in Ankara Al Monitor Retrieved 18 March 2016 TAK What we know about militant PKK offshoot allegedly responsible for Ankara attacks International Business Times 2016 03 15 Retrieved 18 March 2016 a b After Ankara bombing questions over PKK TAK ties resurface Middle East Eye Retrieved 11 December 2016 Turkey s Kurdish TAK faction a breakaway from the PKK 17 03 2016 Deutsche Welle Retrieved 11 December 2016 ANKARA BLAST KURDISH MILITANT GROUP TAK CLAIMS BOMBING Newsweek 2016 03 17 Retrieved 18 March 2016 Dark times for Turkey Ankara blast latest in series of deadly attacks Al Arabiya 14 March 2016 Retrieved 18 March 2016 World Report 2012 Turkey Human Rights Watch 2012 01 22 Retrieved 11 December 2016 PKK TAK in saldirilarini neden durdurmuyor BBC Turkce Retrieved 11 December 2016 TAK We aren t dependent on PKK our actions will spread Archived from the original on 2016 02 02 U S labels Kurdish group as terrorist CNN 1 November 2008 Retrieved 1 November 2008 Council Common Position 2008 586 CFSP updating Common Position 2001 931 CFSP on the application of specific measures to combat terrorism and repealing Common Position 2007 871 CFSP Official Journal of the European Union L 188 71 16 07 2008 eur lex europa eu Proscribed terrorist groups Archived from the original on December 24 2008 Retrieved February 9 2009 Kurdistan Workers Party PKK www aph gov au Parliament of Australia Council of the European Union 13 January 2020 Council Decision CFSP 2020 20 of 13 January 2020 updating the list of persons groups and entities subject to Articles 2 3 and 4 of Common Position 2001 931 CFSP on the application of specific measures to combat terrorism and repealing Decision CFSP 2019 1341 Official Journal of the European Union Retrieved 1 March 2020 Turkiye de halen faaliyetlerine devam eden baslica teror orgutleri Archived from the original on January 14 2013 Retrieved August 15 2008 Turkey rocked by more blasts The Globe and Mail 2006 08 29 Archived from the original on September 1 2006 a b Tourists were few Now none will come The Herald 2006 08 29 Archived from the original on September 1 2006 Turkey bombs Police hunt two CNN 2006 08 29 Archived from the original on September 2 2006 Fresco Adam 2006 08 29 Turkish police foil another attack in Izmir The Times London Retrieved 2010 05 07 a b Timeline Bomb blasts in Turkey BBC 2006 08 29 Turkey Thwarts Bomb Attack in Izmir Der Spiegel 2006 09 29 Police search for two suspected bombers of Turkish resort The Independent London 2006 08 29 Archived from the original on October 1 2007 Retrieved 2010 05 07 Kurdish rebel group claims weekend blasts in Turkey Turkish Press 2006 08 29 Archived from the original on September 27 2007 1 Injured in Mersin Blast Today s Zaman 2006 08 30 One injured in Turkey explosion BBC 2006 08 30 Turkey Blames Kurdish Rebels For Istanbul Blasts That Killed 17 Wall Street Journal 2008 07 28 Retrieved 2008 07 28 a b Cockburn Patrick 2010 06 23 Istanbul bomb marks end of Kurdish ceasefire The Independent London 32 injured in apparent suicide bombing in Turkey CNN November 1 2010 Retrieved November 1 2010 Ayla Albayrak November 4 2010 PKK Splinter Group Admits Istanbul Bombing The Wall Street Journal Retrieved November 4 2010 32 injured in apparent suicide bombing in Turkey CNN September 20 2011 Retrieved September 20 2011 TAK claims responsibility for the attack at Sabiha Gokcen Airport ANF 26 December 2015 Archived from the original on 5 March 2016 Retrieved 20 February 2016 Ankara daki bombali saldirida 1 kisi daha hayatini kaybetti Retrieved 28 February 2016 Ankara daki patlamada olenlerin isim listesi Haberturk Retrieved 28 February 2016 Ankarada patlamada olenlerin isimleri belli oldu 28 ocaga ates dustu ankara patlama Archived from the original on 22 February 2016 Retrieved 28 February 2016 Sehitlerin kimlikleri belli oldu ZAMAN 18 February 2016 Archived from the original on February 19 2016 Ankara bombing Kurdish group claims responsibility Al Jazeera English Retrieved 2016 02 20 Botelho Greg 2015 09 01 Ankara bombing Kurdish militants claim responsibility CNN Retrieved 2016 02 20 22 Turkish Air Force pilots killed Retrieved 21 February 2016 PKK s organization game Anadolu Agency 18 March 2016 Retrieved 19 March 2016 Kurdish militants claim suicide bombing in Turkey s Bursa website Reuters 1 May 2016 Retrieved 9 June 2016 Kurdish militant group says it was behind Istanbul bombing Reuters 10 June 2016 Retrieved 10 June 2016 Explosion outside police station in Istanbul The Independent 6 October 2016 Retrieved 2 January 2017 PKK offshoot claims Kayseri bus bombing that killed 13 soldiers Hurriyet Reuters 20 December 2016 Retrieved 21 December 2016 Kurdish Militants Claim Attack on Off duty Turkish Soldiers Voice of America 20 December 2016 Retrieved 21 December 2016 TAK claims responsibility for the recent Istanbul and Kayseri bombings Firat News Agency 20 December 2016 Retrieved 21 December 2016 DHA Demirren Haber Ajans Son Dakika Haberleri ve Goncel Haberler DHA News Retrieved 2019 08 16 TAK gibt Identitat von gefallener Kampferin bekannt In German ANF News Retrieved 2019 08 16 Adana Valilik bombacisi kadin terorist olu ele gecirildi In Turkish Sozcu Retrieved 2019 08 16 Bibliography Edit Eccarius Kelly Vera 2011 The Militant Kurds A Dual Strategy for Freedom Praeger ISBN 978 0 313 36468 6 External links EditProfile of the Kurdistan Freedom Hawks at the Global Terrorism Database Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kurdistan Freedom Hawks amp oldid 1117463704, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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