Sporadic rallies were held yesterday across Istanbul to protest against what
the Turks called the US double standards on terrorism.
The rallies were held when US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice arrived
here for an international meeting on Iraq after holding talks with Turkish
leaders in Ankara.
A group of protestors gathered amid heightened securities near the Ciragan
Palace Kempinski Hotel, where Rice is to stay for the night before the Iraq
conference, wielding banners and slogans saying "Rice (Yankees) go home."
Turkey has threatened a military incursion into northern Iraq, from where the
PKK launched attacks, but so far the United States has been dissuading Turkey
from launching any major military action.
The US stance has aroused anger among the Turks, who accused Washington of
having double standards on campaign against terrorism.
While the US launched the so-called anti-terror wars in Afghanistan and Iraq,
it is dragging its feet in helping its NATO ally Turkey to crush the PKK,
branded as a terrorist group by Washington and the European Union, they
denounced.
A recent poll by the Pew Research Center in Washington put the US
favorability rating in Turkey at 9 percent, down from a height of 52 percent in
year 2000. It also found that Turks seethe United States as the single biggest
threat to their national security.
Media reports held that Rice's Istanbul trip is also tasked to boost Turkey's
confidence on the United States.
Meanwhile, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan is to meet US
President George W. Bush on Monday over the rising tensions between the two
governments on the PKK issue.
Erdogan has warned that relations between the two NATO allies hinge on
whether Bush agrees to take "concrete, urgent steps" against the
PKK.