Gulf News

Terror attacks target police and ruling party offices in Istanbul

Authoritie­s see role of outlawed ‘leftist terror group’ behind the incidents

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An assailant opened fire on a police car yesterday in Istanbul, just hours after two other attacks against the police and Turkey’s ruling party offices, media reports said.

The series of assaults, which authoritie­s suggested were the work of ultra-leftists, come as the nation is reeling from an unpreceden­ted series of attacks and bombings.

The shooter opened fire on officers in a car in the Esenyurt district of Istanbul, the Dogan news agency said. The assailant left a hand grenade before running away when officers shot back. No injuries were reported.

The attack came in the same area where the gunman blamed for the New Year shooting on an elite nightclub in Istanbul was arrested. Yesterday’s gunfire came less than 12 hours after two rocket attacks in the city on a police headquarte­rs and the ruling Justice and Developmen­t (AKP) Party’s Istanbul offices late Friday.

No one was killed or injured in any of the three attacks, local media said. Images in Turkish media showed an unexploded rocket which had become stuck in a framed text of the Turkish national anthem inside the AKP offices.

Sporadic assaults

No group claimed responsibi­lity for the attacks, but authoritie­s suggested the outlawed ultra-leftist Revolution­ary People’s Liberation PartyFront (DHKP-C) could be to blame. Turkey’s Prime Minister Binali Yildirim said there was speculatio­n that a “leftist terror group” was the culprit but said it was not clear which one, referring to the DHKP-C and another.

In recent years, there have been sporadic attacks by radicals from the DHKP-C, which seeks a Marxist revolution in Turkey. The attacks happened as the Turkish parliament in Ankara was voting on a draft bill to expand President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s powers.

EU Affairs Minister Omer Celik said on Twitter such attacks target people and security services, but they also target “politics and tr(y) to influence decision making mechanisms”.

After multiple bombings in 2016 blamed on Islamist militants and Kurdish militants, the new year began with the bloody attack on Istanbul’s Reina club which killed 39 people. It was later claimed by Daesh.

 ?? AP ?? A policeman secures a road near Istanbul’s main police headquarte­rs on Friday.
AP A policeman secures a road near Istanbul’s main police headquarte­rs on Friday.

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