<p>Kurdish militants from the outlawed PKK group announced a temporary halt in fighting to facilitate rescue work after the huge earthquake that struck southeastern Turkey and parts of Syria.</p>.<p>The Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) has been proscribed as a terrorist organisation by Ankara and its main Western allies for waging a brutal insurgency that has claimed tens of thousands of lives since 1984.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/shame-on-you-erdogan-faces-voter-fury-amid-unprecedented-earthquake-aftermath-1189795.html" target="_blank">'Shame on you!': Erdogan faces voter fury amid unprecedented earthquake, aftermath</a></strong></p>.<p>Ankara is also trying to ban a top opposition party that supports Kurdish causes over its alleged links to the militants.</p>.<p>But Monday's earthquake has reshaped the political landscape while claiming more than 21,000 lives -- more than 18,000 of them in Turkey.</p>.<p>It struck a multi-ethnic region that has witnessed some of the heaviest fighting between Turkish government forces and the PKK.</p>.<p>The group's co-leader Cemil Bayik told the PKK-linked ANF news agency that "thousands of our people are under the rubble" and urged a focus on recovery work rather than waging war.</p>.<p>"We call on all our forces engaged in military actions: stop the military actions in Turkey, in metropolises and cities," he said in comments published on the site late Thursday.</p>.<p>"We have decided to not conduct any operation as long as the Turkish state does not attack," he said.</p>.<p>Bayik said the pause in fighting would stay in place "until the pain of our people is relieved and their wounds are healed".</p>.<p>"Of course, the attitude of the Turkish state will also be decisive in our decision," he added.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/death-toll-rises-rescues-dwindle-in-earthquake-aftermath-1189817.html" target="_blank">Death toll rises, rescues dwindle in earthquake aftermath</a></strong></p>.<p>Government forces have used combat drones to push Kurdish fighters from Turkey's southeastern regions to the northern stretches of neighbouring Iraq.</p>.<p>Turkey is now conducting a low-scale war against the Kurds in northern Iraq and also fighting a separate Kurdish group in Syria that it views as a local branch of the PKK -- but which Washington has relied on to battle Islamic State jihadists.</p>.<p>PKK attacks peaked during a deadly wave of violence in 2015-2016 that followed a breakdown in peace negotiations with Ankara.</p>.<p>The group's founder Abdullah Ocalan has been in jail since being nabbed by Turkish intelligence in 1999 while he was in Nairobi.</p>.<p>Ocalan's jailing was followed by a brief unilateral ceasefire and then the start of formal truce talks in 2013.</p>.<p>The talks collapsed after the PKK killed two Turkish policemen in 2015.</p>.<p>Turkish officials did not respond to Bayik's comments.</p>.<p>The government has been trying to ban the Kurdish-backed Peoples' Democratic Party -- the Turkish parliament's third-largest -- over its ties to PKK.</p>.<p>Turkey's top court was considering whether to ban the party ahead of elections that President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has proposed holding on May 14.</p>.<p>But most state institutions have suspended operations to focus on earthquake relief work.</p>
<p>Kurdish militants from the outlawed PKK group announced a temporary halt in fighting to facilitate rescue work after the huge earthquake that struck southeastern Turkey and parts of Syria.</p>.<p>The Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) has been proscribed as a terrorist organisation by Ankara and its main Western allies for waging a brutal insurgency that has claimed tens of thousands of lives since 1984.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/shame-on-you-erdogan-faces-voter-fury-amid-unprecedented-earthquake-aftermath-1189795.html" target="_blank">'Shame on you!': Erdogan faces voter fury amid unprecedented earthquake, aftermath</a></strong></p>.<p>Ankara is also trying to ban a top opposition party that supports Kurdish causes over its alleged links to the militants.</p>.<p>But Monday's earthquake has reshaped the political landscape while claiming more than 21,000 lives -- more than 18,000 of them in Turkey.</p>.<p>It struck a multi-ethnic region that has witnessed some of the heaviest fighting between Turkish government forces and the PKK.</p>.<p>The group's co-leader Cemil Bayik told the PKK-linked ANF news agency that "thousands of our people are under the rubble" and urged a focus on recovery work rather than waging war.</p>.<p>"We call on all our forces engaged in military actions: stop the military actions in Turkey, in metropolises and cities," he said in comments published on the site late Thursday.</p>.<p>"We have decided to not conduct any operation as long as the Turkish state does not attack," he said.</p>.<p>Bayik said the pause in fighting would stay in place "until the pain of our people is relieved and their wounds are healed".</p>.<p>"Of course, the attitude of the Turkish state will also be decisive in our decision," he added.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/death-toll-rises-rescues-dwindle-in-earthquake-aftermath-1189817.html" target="_blank">Death toll rises, rescues dwindle in earthquake aftermath</a></strong></p>.<p>Government forces have used combat drones to push Kurdish fighters from Turkey's southeastern regions to the northern stretches of neighbouring Iraq.</p>.<p>Turkey is now conducting a low-scale war against the Kurds in northern Iraq and also fighting a separate Kurdish group in Syria that it views as a local branch of the PKK -- but which Washington has relied on to battle Islamic State jihadists.</p>.<p>PKK attacks peaked during a deadly wave of violence in 2015-2016 that followed a breakdown in peace negotiations with Ankara.</p>.<p>The group's founder Abdullah Ocalan has been in jail since being nabbed by Turkish intelligence in 1999 while he was in Nairobi.</p>.<p>Ocalan's jailing was followed by a brief unilateral ceasefire and then the start of formal truce talks in 2013.</p>.<p>The talks collapsed after the PKK killed two Turkish policemen in 2015.</p>.<p>Turkish officials did not respond to Bayik's comments.</p>.<p>The government has been trying to ban the Kurdish-backed Peoples' Democratic Party -- the Turkish parliament's third-largest -- over its ties to PKK.</p>.<p>Turkey's top court was considering whether to ban the party ahead of elections that President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has proposed holding on May 14.</p>.<p>But most state institutions have suspended operations to focus on earthquake relief work.</p>