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Turkish police shoot dead attackers as car bomb kills two in Izmir Car bomb kills two outside courthouse in Turkish city of Izmir
(35 minutes later)
Two people have been killed in a car bomb blast and two suspects shot dead after an attack outside a court complex in the coastal Turkish city of Izmir. A car bomb has exploded outside a courthouse in western Turkey, killing two people and wounding five, less than a week after a massacre in an Istanbul nightclub killed 39 revellers and left the country on edge.
The blast killed a police officer and a court employee, and wounded five others. Turkish authorities said two alleged gunmen were killed in a shootout following the attack in the city of Izmir. The city had been the scene of raids connected to the Istanbul attack, which was claimed by the Islamic State terror group.
A second vehicle thought to have belonged to the attackers was detonated in a controlled explosion. Several ambulances and police were dispatched to the scene. The latest attack comes days after the end of an especially deadly year in Turkey, in which 275 people were killed in terror attacks and more than 1,000 maimed, according to Turkish media.
Initial findings suggest the Kurdish PKK militant group was behind the attack, provincial governor Erol Ayyıldız said. Kurdish militants have also intensified their deadly insurgency in recent months and the smaller scale of the attack, as well as the choice of target, led some officials to suggest it was carried out by one of several Kurdish militant groups. Provincial governor Erol Ayyildiz blamed Thursday’s carnage on the most prominent of them, the PKK.
“A clash erupted after our police officers wanted to stop a vehicle at a police check point in front of Bayraklı courthouse,” he told reporters. “In this clash, terrorists detonated the car bomb while trying to escape.” Isis attacks in Turkey have focused on soft civilian targets and political rallies, whereas strikes by groups such as the PKK have typically targeted police officers and soldiers, as well as state institutions.
Ayyıldız confirmed that police had shot dead two of the attackers, and said they were armed with Kalashnikov rifles and grenades. Authorities said a police officer and court employee had been killed in the blast. Images from the scene showed one suspect attacker apparently dead on the ground, still clutching an assault rifle. A video taken as the attack unfolded shows the flash of an explosion from a car. A burst of gunfire can be heard on other footage taken after the blast.
The incident follows a string of attacks carried out by Islamic State and Kurdish militants that have left Turkey on edge. Weapons found at the scene suggested that a much larger attack had been foiled, the Turkish deputy prime minister, Veysi Kaynak, said. “Based on the preparation, the weapons, bombs and ammunition seized, it is understood that a big atrocity was being planned,” Kaynak told reporters.
On Wednesday, police in Izmir investigating the New Year’s Eve attack on the Reina nightclub in Istanbul detained what they said were 20 suspected Isis militants thought to be of central Asian and north African origin. The focus of the manhunt for the Istanbul gunman, who escaped after mowing down 39 people with an AK-47 in a seven minute rampage, had turned towards Izmir on Wednesday, when 20 members of the Uighur ethnic minority were arrested by counter terrorism police. After initially suspecting the gunman to be from Kyrgyzstan, officials now believe he may be a Uighur. Authorities say some of those arrested had travelled from China’s Xinjiang region.
Fake passports, mobile phones and equipment including night vision goggles and a GPS device were seized. Intelligence officials are also working on a separate theory that the attacker is from Uzbekistan. Either way, he is believed to have spent time in the central Turkish city of Konya, through where many of those to have launched attacks in Turkey are thought to have transited. European intelligence officials have long believed that Konya has been home to an Isis cell that has taken direct instruction from the group’s senior leaders inside Syria and also acts as a reception base for jihadis travelling beyond Turkey’s borders.
Isis have claimed responsibility for the nightclub attack, in which 39 people were killed. The gunman is still at large. Turkey has stepped up its efforts to curb Isis inside its frontier and in Syria, where Turkish tanks and troops are supporting Syrian rebels as they push towards the town of al-Bab - a vitally important hub for Isis, where its external operations arm has been based for the past three years.
The Turkish government has described the nightclub gunman as an ethnic Uighur who is believed to be part of a cell. After using Turkish borders to cross into Syria and Iraq from mid-2012, Isis has increasingly turned its guns on Turkey, which it accuses of allying with western interests as the military push to defeat it steps up in Iraq and Syria.
This is a breaking news story. More details to follow Efforts to fight Kurdish groups, especially the PKK, have also intensified, with Ankara believing that the Kurds are using the chaos of Syria to advance a four-decade goal of self-determination in southeastern Turkey.
In December, two bombs outside a football stadium in Istanbul killed 44 people, most of them police officers. The TAK – an offshoot of the PKK – claimed responsibility for what was the deadliest strike against security forces in several decades. Days earlier, a bomb on a bus in central Turkey killed 13 soldiers and wounded more than 50.