Kurdish Rebels Deny Turkey Truce Plans

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Turkey's outlawed Kurdish PKK rebel group denied Thursday reports that its militants would withdraw from positions in the country as part of a planned truce, saying they were false and part of a "deliberate psychological war".

Pro-government Sabah newspaper reported that the jailed leader of the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) Abdullah Ocalan would declare a truce "within 10 days", followed by the withdrawal of the rebels from positions on Turkish soil by March 21.

It followed a similar report in the mass-circulation Hurriyet on Tuesday that PKK rebels would declare a ceasefire and begin withdrawing to bases in northern Iraq in the spring under a timetable agreed between Ocalan and Turkey's intelligence agency.

But the PKK dismissed the reports, saying they were part of "a deliberate psychological war aimed at manipulating" public opinion, according to a statement carried by the pro-Kurdish Firat news agency.

"The reports on this subject are manufactured lies," the PKK said.

The PKK, which took up arms for autonomy in the Kurdish majority southeast in 1984, is branded a terrorist group by Turkey and its Western allies.

The Turkish government has acknowledged that its secret services resumed peace talks with Ocalan late last year, aiming to disarm the rebels who use their bases in Iraq as a springboard to launch attacks on government security forces in the southeast.

Last week, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said his government was determined to settle the nearly three-decade conflict and would guarantee safe passage for rebels wishing to leave Turkey.

"If you are sincere and honest, you lay down your arms," Erdogan said, referring to the PKK.

"If you don't want to live in this country, you are free to go to any country you like. We assure you that... we'll do our best not to let what happened at our borders before happen again," he said.

There have been clashes in the past between Turkish security forces and the PKK as rebels were leaving the country for northern Iraq.

Turkey, Iraq, Syria and Iran all have Kurdish minorities in regions straddling their common borders.

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