Car bomb at police station in southeast
Turkey kills three, wounds many
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[June 08, 2016]
By Seyhmus Cakan
MIDYAT, Turkey (Reuters) - A car bomb
attack by Kurdish militants on a police station in southeastern Turkey
killed three people and wounded more than 30 on Wednesday, Prime
Minister Binali Yildirim said, a day after a bomb targeting police in
Istanbul killed 11.
The explosion in the town of Midyat destroyed the facade of a
five-story block, damaged other buildings, and sent a plume of thick
black smoke rising over the area. Hospital sources said police and
civilians were among the wounded.
Clashes broke out between security forces and Kurdistan Workers
Party (PKK) militants in Midyat as the attack took place, security
sources said.
The town is in Mardin, a province bordering Syria and part of
Turkey's largely Kurdish southeast, where the PKK has waged a
three-decade insurgency for Kurdish autonomy. Violence has spiraled
since a ceasefire collapsed almost a year ago.
The unrest has been fueled by the war in Syria. Turkey says the PKK
- considered a terrorist organization by Ankara, the European Union
and the United States - has deep ties to the Syrian Kurdish YPG
militia fighting just across the border.
The groups do not deny links. The PKK founded the YPG as a Syrian
organization a decade ago and both are inspired by Abdullah Ocalan,
who led the PKK from inception and lived in Syria shortly before his
capture in 1999.
Ambulances rushed to the scene of the blast and reinforcements from
the security forces were being sent to the area from around Mardin
province, security sources said.
"My nation should know that the state of the Turkish Republic is
strong. It is one and united no matter what the terrorist
organization does," Yildirim said in Istanbul, after visiting those
wounded in the previous day's attack.
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"Whether they carry out suicide bombings in our cities, whatever
methods they use, they can never tire this nation and can never pull
us back from this honorable fight."
There has been no claim of responsibility for Tuesday's attack in
Istanbul, in which a car bomb ripped through a police bus during the
morning rush hour. But Kurdish militants have staged similar attacks
on the security forces, including in Istanbul and the capital
Ankara.
Security concerns were already hitting tourism and investor
confidence in Turkey. Wars in neighboring Syria and Iraq have
fostered a home-grown Islamic State network blamed for a series of
suicide bombings, while Kurdish militants have increasingly struck
beyond their usual targets in the southeast.
Yildirim said six police and five civilians were among the dead from
Tuesday's attack, which he said had targeted riot police units
responsible for security at the nearby Istanbul University as they
changed shifts.
Two police officers and one civilian were killed in Midyat, he said.
"The murderer is the PKK organization. This hasn't surprised us, but
the circle around them is slowly narrowing. Both in the cities and
in rural areas, we will continue to fight them decisively," he said.
(Additional reporting by Humeyra Pamuk and Daren Butler in Istanbul;
Writing by Nick Tattersall; Editing by Alison Williams)
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