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Turkish police officers killed in bomb attack | Turkish police officers killed in bomb attack |
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Twelve Turkish police officers have been killed in a bomb attack in eastern Turkey blamed on the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ party (PKK) as violence in the south-east threatened to spiral out of control and Ankara launched a massive wave of airstrikes against rebel strongholds in northern Iraq.. | |
The attack targeted a minibus carrying officers working in the Igdir region of eastern Turkey at the Dilucu gate marking the border with Azerbaijan, state-run Anatolia news agency reported. | |
This is the second deadliest attack of the current flare-up in unrest after 16 Turkish soldiers were killed at the weekend in the Kurdish-dominated south-east. | This is the second deadliest attack of the current flare-up in unrest after 16 Turkish soldiers were killed at the weekend in the Kurdish-dominated south-east. |
The prime minister, Ahmet Davutoğlu, has vowed to “wipe out” PKK militants from the mountains of eastern Turkey following the deaths. | |
The PKK, known for sometimes exaggerating the death tolls of its attacks, said 31 Turkish soldiers had been killed in Sunday’s gun and bomb attack in Dağlıca. | |
Turkey has staged airstrikes and ground operations against the PKK in its strongholds of south-eastern Turkey and northern Iraq in a bid to destroy it. | |
But the PKK has hit back, killing dozens of Turkish police and soldiers in almost daily attacks, with the bloodier ones marking a new intensification of the conflict. | |
In response to the Dağlıca attack, Turkish warplanes launched a massive air operation early on Tuesday in northern Iraq. More than 50 Turkish jets were involved in the six-hour raid, killing “35 to 40 terrorists according to preliminary findings”, Anatolia said. | |
“These terrorists must be wiped out from the mountains,” Davutoğlu said on Monday. “The mountains of this country, the plains, highlands, cities, will be not abandoned to terrorists,” he said. | |
The violence has left in tatters a 2013 ceasefire aimed at allowing a final peace deal to end the PKK’s three-decade insurgency, which has claimed tens of thousands of lives. | |
Related: Turkish jets hit PKK targets after Kurdish ambush kills 15 soldiers | |
The PKK initially took up arms in 1984 with the aim of establishing an independent state for Turkey’s Kurdish minority, although lately the demands focused on greater autonomy and rights. | |
Commentators have expressed alarm that the current situation increasingly resembles the worst days of the PKK’s insurgency in the 90s when attacks on this scale were commonplace. | |
In a scene that has become familiar over the last weeks, Davutoğlu will attend a funeral for the soldiers killed in the Dağlıca attack in the eastern city of Van later on Tuesday. | |
The unrest comes as Turkey prepares to hold snap elections on 1 November following polls in June where the president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s ruling party lost its overall majority as a pro-Kurdish party made a major breakthrough. | |
Davutoğlu said the elections would be held under democratic conditions and urged the country’s political forces to stand “shoulder to shoulder” in a show of unity. | |
The co-chair of the pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic party (HDP), Selahattin Demirtaş, called for peace between Turks and Kurds. “I am calling on all my brothers. No matter what they do … do not harm our brotherhood,” Demirtas told reporters. “Kurds, Turks embrace each other. The best medicine against all the provocations is peace.” |