An extract from a BBC story. The Weblink also includes a 5 minute video.
R10
Rendezvous with the PKK
Following the double bomb attack in Istanbul at the weekend, the spotlight has turned on the Kurdish rebel group, the PKK. The BBC's Clive Myrie tells how he recently travelled to northern Iraq to put allegations of terrorism to the group's leader.
We set off early in the morning, unsure exactly where we would end up - though we knew we were heading towards the Qandil Mountains of northern Iraq.
It is classic bandit country and home to one of the world's most durable guerrilla groups - the Kurdish separatist PKK.
We were told not to bring any TV equipment. As you can imagine, this is not what a TV correspondent and crew want to hear.
"Don't worry, they will provide everything," my contact kept telling me.
The PKK were taking no chances, after the assassination of one tribal leader in Afghanistan with an explosive device placed inside a TV camera back in 2001.
To get to the PKK you have to cross Kurdish Regional Government or KRG checkpoints - we kept a low profile in the back of the car as we drove through.
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'Struggling for rights'
The scene was like something out of 1960s South America. There were men and women all around in this green lush village wearing army fatigues, with Kalashnikov rifles slung over shoulders or propped against walls.
The image of Che Guevara graced the wooden butt of one AK........
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/7530713.stm