Turkey to fly troops to bases after deadly road convoy attacks
ANKARA (Reuters) - Turkey signed an agreement on Thursday to
transport troops to and from their military bases by air after a string
of fatal attacks on road convoys prompted it to rethink security their
arrangements.
The agreement, with state carrier Turkish Airlines,
follows a dramatic increase in attacks on Turkish security forces in
the past 18 months by Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) militants, who have
launched a series of fatal raids on troop convoys in the mainly Kurdish
southeast.
Turkey's government and military began discussing alternative
transport arrangements with the airline after a bomb attack on a
security convoy in southeastern Bingol province which killed 10 people
in September.
At the signing ceremony on Thursday, Turkey's
defense minister said he envisaged some 250,000 soldiers and
non-commissioned officers would be transported under the scheme. It will
begin on December 28.
Flights will be free of charge for troops
with all costs met by the defense ministry. Other private airlines have
also agreed to transport the soldiers, when needed, at a reduced cost
and at no charge to the troops.
Soldiers will be flown to existing airports and transferred from there to outlying bases.
Military service is compulsory in Turkey, which has the second-largest army in NATO, with around half a million men.
Violence between the state and the PKK has reached levels not seen
since the 1990s with at least 870 people killed between June 2011 and
the end of last month, according to a tally by the think-tank
International Crisis Group (ICG).
More than 40,000 people have
been killed in the conflict between Turkey and the PKK since it took up
arms against the state in 1984 with the aim of carving out an ethnic
homeland in the southeast.
The PKK, designated a terrorist
organization by the United States and the European Union as well as by
Turkey, has since softened its demands for greater autonomy for Turkey's
Kurds.
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