Kurds
mourn, protest after bombing at Turkish election rally
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[June 06, 2015]
By Humeyra Pamuk and Seyhmus Cakan
DIYARBAKIR, Turkey (Reuters) - Turkish
Kurds gathered on Saturday to mourn and protest at the scene of bomb
blasts that killed two people and wounded more than 200 at an election
rally, with many voicing anger at President Tayyip Erdogan ahead of
Sunday's parliamentary polls.
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The two explosions, which Erdogan described as a "provocation"
designed to undermine polls, tore through a rally where thousands
had gathered in support of the pro-Kurdish Peoples' Democratic Party
(HDP) in Diyarbakir, the largest city in Turkey's mainly Kurdish
southeast.
Ball bearings, nails and other metal parts from the device were
gathered as evidence but no suspects have been identified, security
sources told Reuters.
Hospital sources said more than 200 had sought treatment. A Kurdish
political group said more than 300 were hurt.
Chanting "Murderer Erdogan", hundreds marched behind a banner
declaring "peace despite everything" to the scene, where they laid
red carnations, a witness said.
Erdogan, the most popular politician in Turkey but accused by
opponents of authoritarian tendencies, seeks a large majority for
the ruling AK Party to furnish him with broader new powers. However,
if the HDP clears a 10 percent hurdle to enter parliament that could
thwart his ambitions.
Hundreds joined a convoy of cars heading to a funeral for a
16-year-old boy. Onlookers made the victory sign and chanted
"martyrs don't die" and "AKP you will pay for this".
"If it weren't for Chairman Selahattin there would have been a lot
of bloody and violent events yesterday," said retired 61-year-old
Mehmet, referring to Friday's call for calm from HDP leader
Selahattin Demirtas.
Demirtas has sought to extend support for the HDP beyond its Kurdish
core vote with appeals to center-left and secular opponents of
Erdogan who has assumed an increasingly religious tone in recent
months.
Party leaders were due to hold final rallies on Saturday.
TERRIFYING CRUSH
"The incident has...seriously cast a shadow over the election. We
will hold the election one way or another," Erdogan, whose AK Party
first swept to power in 2002, said.
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Witness Guy Martin, a British photographer, told Reuters the blasts
occurred some five minutes apart - the first in a rubbish bin which
was ripped apart and the second in front a power generator. In the
aftermath he saw one person who had lost a leg and others with
shrapnel wounds.
"It was a heart-shaking, ribcage-shaking noise," he said of one of
the explosions. "The most terrifying thing is that crush of people."
Police fired water cannon and tear gas to disperse crowds after the
blasts, witnesses said.
Security has been tight at HDP rallies. Nationalists clashed with
HDP supporters at a Demirtas rally in the northern town of Erzurum.
Demirtas has said his party has been the target of more than 70
violent attacks during the campaign, including a double bombing in
southern Turkish cities last month which wounded six.
He says the HDP will continue to promote peace talks between Kurdish
rebels and the government whatever the election outcome.
Erdogan, who used to head the AK Party, has accused the HDP of being
a front for the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), which took up arms in
1984 in an insurgency that killed 40,000 people.
Jailed PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan and Ankara launched peace talks
more than two years ago.
(Writing by Daren Butler; additional reporting by Ayla Jean Yackley
in Iatanbul; editing by David Dolan, Ralph Boulton)
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