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  • Turkish troops on patrol: A soldier keeps watch for PKK rebels near the town of Yuksekova, near the border with Iraq.
  • Rift: Turks chant nationalist slogans in downtown Istanbul, Turkey on Sunday during a protest against the separatist Kurdish rebel group of PKK.
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Amid war drums, Turkey's Kurds fear loss of rights

Democratic gains in southeastern Turkey may be sacrificed if Ankara goes after rebels in Iraq.

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Reporter Yigal Schleifer discusses popular perceptions of the PKK among Kurds in southern Turkey.

"While we are looking for terrorists in the Kandil Mountains [of northern Iraq] we should not forget that the supporters of terrorists are ... even in the corridors of the parliament," Devlet Bahceli, leader of the right-wing Nationalist Action Party (MHP), said at a recent party meeting, referring to the DTP.

Mr. Aytar warns that "the real danger is... an increasing securitization of the Turkish political discourse, which is threatening democratization."

Kurds, most of whom maintain a strong ethnic identity even if they don't support the PKK's goal of a Kurdish state on Turkish soil, are already feeling alienated by anti-PKK rhetoric and protests taking place across the country.

Turkey is pushing the US and Iraq to clamp down on the PKK. Some 3,000 fighters are using Iraq as a base for carrying out attacks in Turkey. On Sunday, US Gen. David Petraeus said, "I am not going to say anything about what we may be doing with our long-standing NATO allies Turkey, although we clearly are doing things with them. Nor will I say what we are doing with our Iraqi partners to endeavor to stabilize the situation and to ensure that the sides are talking and taking actions to reduce the tension."

It's not difficult to picture a scenario where local support returns to the PKK in a place like Yuksekova, where almost everyone knows a PKK fighter who has been killed or who is currently up in the mountains of northern Iraq.

"If you knock on any door here, you find someone who has lost a loved one," says Yuksekova mayor Mehmet Salih Yildiz, a member of the pro-Kurdish Democratic Society Party (DTP).

"The pain is deep, but still there's a hope for peace," says the mayor, whose two sons were killed fighting with the PKK.

Aliza Marcus, a former Reuters correspondent in Turkey and author of the recently published "Blood and Belief: The PKK and the Kurdish Fight for Independence," says these deep ties have left the rebel group with a strong reserve of sympathy and respect in the region.

"Certainly the PKK is not as popular as it was in the 1990s. But still it is very strong and it's able to direct the Kurdish political debate in Turkey," she says.

Halit Tekci, an older gentleman sitting at a sidewalk café in Yuksekova, says, "What will ruin Turkey are these protests [in the cities calling for war against the PKK]. "These protests only increase hatred against the Kurds and will lead to a Turkish-Kurdish conflict." .

Mayor Yildiz says he hopes that the normalcy that his city has been able to regain will hold, despite the drums of war that are beating throughout Turkey. "If there is an incursion ...our democratic rights will be lost," he says. "People are sick and tired of this conflict. They hate it."

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