Türkiye on Thursday blasted as "completely unfounded and untrue" claims that its military used chemical weapons in its fight against outlawed Kurdish fighters in northern Iraq.
Media outlets close to the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), which Ankara and its Western allies list as a terror group, claimed that the Turkish army was using chemical weapons in its counter-terror operations.
"The allegations that 'chemical weapons' are used by the Turkish Armed Forces... are completely unfounded and untrue," the defense ministry said, accusing some of seeking to cast a shadow on the army's accomplishments in its fight against the PKK, AFP reported.
Turkish prosecutors launched an investigation into Sebnem Korur Fincanci, head of the Turkish Doctors' Union, after she said she had examined video images and claimed that chemical weapons had been used.
"It's obvious that one of the toxic chemical gases that directly affects the nervous system has been used," she claimed.
"Although it is forbidden to use it, we see it is used in clashes."
Fincanci is accused of "making propaganda for a terrorist organization" and "insulting the Turkish nation and the Turkish state", the official Anadolu news agency reported.
Contacted by AFP, Fincanci confirmed the opening of a probe and said she had called for "an effective investigation" into the allegations.
"But instead (prosecutors) launch an investigation against me. This is not surprising at all," she said.
"They are giving an ultimatum to society by targeting me," she added.
International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War (IPPNW), a non-partisan federation of medical groups in over 60 countries, sent a mission to northern Iraq in late September.
"Some indirect evidence for possible violations of the Chemical Weapons Convention was found," it said in its report.
"Material found near an area abandoned by the Turkish Army included containers for hydrochloric acid and bleach, which could be used to produce chlorine, a classical chemical warfare agent," according to the report.