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Turkish
police on Tuesday detained some 40 people, including a number of
journalists, as part of a growing investigation into a Kurdish group
that prosecutors accuse of links to Kurdish rebels, the country's
state-run television said.
The private Dogan news agency said Mustafa Ozer, a
photographer working for the French news agency, Agence France Presse,
and journalists for Kurdish media organizations were among the detained.
Eric Baradat, editor-in-chief of Agence France
Presse, confirmed that a photographer for the Paris-based agency was
detained but could not provide any details, citing agency policy.
Turkish state media said the latest arrests are part
of an investigation launched two years ago. Since then hundreds of
Kurdish activists, including elected mayors, have been detained on
charges of membership of the Union of Kurdistan Communities, a group
prosecutors accuse of being an offshoot of the outlawed PKK. The
activists deny the accusation.
The official Anadolu Agency said Tuesday's raids were
directed against the "press and propaganda" leg of the Union of
Kurdistan Communities.
The PKK, branded a terrorist organization by the
United States and the European Union, has been fighting for Kurdish
autonomy in Turkey since 1984. Tens of thousands of people have died in
the conflict since then.
The state-run TRT television said police on Tuesday
conducted simultaneous raids in Istanbul and six other Turkish cities,
detaining some 40 people. They will be questioned by anti-terrorism
police in Istanbul, the station said.
The pro-Kurdish Firat news agency said at least 25
people were rounded up and that most of the detained are journalists
working for Kurdish media organizations, including the Dicle news agency
and the Birgun newspaper.
Tuesday's detentions are likely to further increase
concerns over press freedoms in Turkey — a predominantly Muslim
democracy that seeks EU membership — where dozens of journalists have
been jailed, mostly on anti-terror charges. They include journalists
accused of aiding a hardline secularist network which prosecutors say
plotted to bring down Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's
Islamic-rooted government.
The United States and the EU have criticized Turkey's
press freedoms and there are calls for the country to revise
anti-terrorism laws which have led to the arrests of the journalists as
well as dozens of student protesters.
Earlier this year, police also arrested an
academician and a publisher as well as lawyers acting for the PKK's
imprisoned leader Abdullah Ocalan in connection with their investigation
into the group. No trial date has been set.
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