AL-AMADIA, Iraq, May 11, 2013 (AFP) - Iraqi Kurds living near the border are wary of thousands of Kurdish fighters leaving Turkey for northern Iraq, and hope the move does not devolve into more Turkish air and artillery strikes.
Turkey's military has for years targeted fighters from the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) in Iraq's autonomous Kurdistan region, keeping farmers from their land and sometimes killing and wounding civilians in the process.
The PKK, which has fought a 29-year armed nationalist campaign against Ankara to set up an independent Kurdish state in southeastern Anatolia, is now withdrawing its fighters into Iraq, where it already has bases, as part of a peace drive with Turkey.
While it is a positive sign for peace prospects, the movement of some 2,000 additional PKK fighters into Iraq has not put residents at ease.
“We hope not to hear the sounds of Turkish artillery and airplanes bombarding our mountains again,” said Mohammed Saeed, 47, a resident of the town of Al-Amadia, near the border with Turkey.
“We are afraid that the fighting will start again,” Saeed said.
A flare-up of violence would not be without precedent -- mass PKK withdrawals in 1999 were disrupted when Turkish forces ambushed departing rebels, killing around 500 people and wrecking hopes for a permanent peace.
The PKK has also claimed Turkey was boosting troop numbers near the border and warned against provocations which could hamper the process.
Saeed said that due to the conflict, “we left large areas of our lands, areas that are still deserted.””I wish they could reach permanent solutions with the Turkish government,” Saeed said, but he does not believe that will happen any time soon.
Karwan Ahmed, 37, said that “all we want is for things to get better.””I think the best thing is to reach permanent solutions with Turkey for the Kurdish issue there,” Ahmed said.
“We hope that the Kurds in Turkey get their rights so that things would get better permanently, and the fighters would return to their people,” he said.
The PKK fighters are leaving Turkey on foot, travelling through the rugged border zone to reach their safe havens in the Qandil mountains in northern Iraq, where they will join the thousands of fighters already there.
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has repeatedly vowed that retreating rebels “will not be touched” and said “laying down weapons” should be the top priority for the PKK.
Turkey is believed to be home to the largest single community of ethnic Kurds -- between 13 and 19 million, out of a total population of between 25 and 35 million scattered across Iraq, Iran and Syria.
Over the years, the PKK's demands have evolved from outright independence to autonomy as well as cultural and language rights.
The PKK is believed to have between 3,000 and 5,000 active guerrillas -- possibly less than half of its strength up until 1999.
The group, which is blacklisted as a terrorist organisation by Turkey, the United States and the European
Union, took up arms in 1984 and since then the conflict has killed around 45,000 people.
Iraq's federal government, which has made repeated complaints to Turkey about air and artillery strikes in its territory, is not pleased that more PKK fighters will enter the country.
The foreign ministry said in a statement that while the Iraqi government welcomes any settlement that ends the PKK-Turkey conflict, it “does not accept the entry of armed groups into its territory.”But it is Kurdish, not federal, security forces who man Iraq's border with Turkey and ultimately decide who enters the region.