Turkish flights to Iraq’s Sulaimaniyah resume after PKK-linked ban

Flights between Turkiye and the Iraqi Kurdish city of Sulaimaniyah resumed on Monday. (AFP/File)
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Updated 03 November 2025
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Turkish flights to Iraq’s Sulaimaniyah resume after PKK-linked ban

  • Turkiye is the main transit point for flights in and out of the key city in Iraq’s autonomous Kurdistan region

SULAIMANIYAH, Iraq: Flights between Turkiye and the Iraqi Kurdish city of Sulaimaniyah resumed on Monday after a two-and-a-half year ban due to accusations from Ankara of increased militant activity in the province.

Airport spokesman Dana Mohammed said that the first Turkish Airlines flight landed in Sulaimaniyah Airport from Turkiye, with 105 passengers on board ... before departing to Istanbul with 123 passengers.”

Turkiye had announced in April 2023 a ban on flights to and from Sulaimaniyah International Airport over allegations that the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party had infiltrated the airport and boosted activity in the province.

Mohammed said that Monday’s flights marked “the end of the ban” on the airport, adding that “Turkish airspace has been reopened as of today to flights from Europe to the (Sulaimaniyah) airport and vice versa.”

Turkiye is the main transit point for flights in and out of the key city in Iraq’s autonomous Kurdistan region.

The spokesman added that Turkish Airlines would operate four weekly flights to the city, while the Turkish budget carrier AJet would begin flights from December.

Days after Ankara announced the ban, Iraq accused Turkiye of striking near the airport while US forces were visiting alongside Mazloum Abdi, leader of the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces.

Turkiye has repeatedly alleged that the Peoples’ Protection Units, a key component of the SDF, are linked to the PKK.

The PKK began withdrawing all of its forces from Turkish soil to northern Iraq last month.

The group formally renounced its armed struggle against Turkiye in May, drawing a line under four decades of violence that had claimed some 50,000 lives.


Iran releases on bail two reformists arrested after protests: local media

Updated 6 sec ago
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Iran releases on bail two reformists arrested after protests: local media

  • Reformists traditionally call for more social freedoms and the establishment of a civil society
TEHRAN: Iranian authorities have released on bail two senior reformist figures who were arrested in recent days following anti-government protests in January, local media reported.
“Javad Emam and Ebrahim Asgharzadeh were released a few minutes ago after posting bail,” their lawyer, Hojjat Kermani, said in an interview with the ISNA news agency published on Thursday evening.
Asgharzadeh is a former member of parliament and Emam is the spokesman of the Reformist Front, the main coalition of the reformist camp.
They were accused of “undermining national unity” and “coordinating with enemy propaganda,” the Fars news agency reported at the time of their arrests.
Reformists traditionally call for more social freedoms and the establishment of a civil society and backed current president Masoud Pezeshkian during his 2024 campaign.
The lawyer expressed hope that the release of Azar Mansouri, head of the Reform Front since 2023 could come “in the next few days when her arrest warrant is revoked.”
Mansouri, 60, an adviser to reformist former president Mohammad Khatami, was arrested on Sunday alongside two other reformists.
The arrests come weeks after deadly protests erupted across the country, in which thousands of people died and many more were more arrested.
In 2009, Emam was one of the campaign managers for Mir Hossein Mousavi, a leading figure in the Iranian opposition and former prime minister, who has been under house arrest since 2011.