Albuquerque Journal

Young bomber kills 51 at Turkish wedding

69 wounded in attack, 17 critically

- BY CINAR KIPER ASSOCIATED PRESS

ISTANBUL — A child suicide bomber killed at least 51 people and wounded nearly 70 others at a Kurdish wedding party near Turkey’s border with Syria, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Sunday, decrying the attack as an apparent attempt by Islamic State extremists to destabiliz­e the nation by exploiting ethnic and religious tensions.

“As of now, the preliminar­y conclusion­s by our governor’s office and the police establishm­ent point to an attack by Daesh,” Erdogan said, using another common term for IS.

“It was clear that Daesh had such an organizati­on in Gaziantep or was attempting to make room for itself in recent times,” he said.

The bombing late Saturday in Gaziantep was the deadliest attack in Turkey this year.

It comes amid ongoing struggles between the government and Kurdish militants linked to the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party, known as the PKK, and as the country is still reeling from the aftermath of last month’s failed coup attempt, which the government has blamed on U.S.-based Muslim cleric Fethullah Gulen and his followers.

Addressing the nation, Erdogan said the age of the attacker in Gaziantep was between 12 and 14. He said 69 people were wounded, with 17 of them in critical condition.

He again blamed the attack on the Islamic State, but there was no immediate claim of responsibi­lity.

The pro-Kurdish political party HDP condemned the attack on the wedding, which it said was attended by many of its party members.

It said in a statement that it was “quite significan­t” that the attack, which it also blamed on IS, came hours after the Kurdistan Communitie­s Union, a militant organizati­on that includes the PKK, announced plans to try to negotiate to end a threedecad­e conflict between Kurdish militants and the Turkish government.

A bus driver who shuttled some of the guests from Siirt to Gaziantep said that he couldn’t believe the party was targeted.

“This was a wedding party. Just a regular wedding party,” Hamdullah Ceyhan told the state-run Anadolu Agency. “This attack was deplorable. How did they do such a thing?”

The bride and groom weren’t in life-threatenin­g conditions and were undergoing treatment, but the groom’s sister and uncle were among the dead, Anadolu reported.

Multiple opposition parties denounced the attack, as did many foreign government­s including the U.S., Germany, Austria, Russia, Egypt, Sweden, Greece, France, Bahrain, Qatar and Jordan and global institutio­ns including the United Nations, the European Union and NATO.

Security expert Metin Gurcan, a former Turkish military officer and columnist for the online newspaper AlMonitor, said that IS views the attack as “hitting two birds with one stone” — as retaliatio­n for Syrian Kurdish advances on their forces in Syria, and for Turkey’s attacks on IS targets.

Gurcan added that IS has been trying to agitate or exploit ethnic and religious tensions in Turkey, and “we know very well to what extent wedding attacks can sow disorder in nation’s social fabric from the Afghanista­n experience.”

The suicide bombing follows a June attack on Istanbul’s main airport where IS suspects killed 44 people. A dual suicide bombing blamed on IS at a peace rally in Turkey’s capital, Ankara, in October killed 103 people.

 ?? IHA/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The shoe of a young victim and a piece of metal near the scene after Saturday’s bomb attack in Gaziantep, southeaste­rn Turkey. An outdoor wedding party was targeted.
IHA/ASSOCIATED PRESS The shoe of a young victim and a piece of metal near the scene after Saturday’s bomb attack in Gaziantep, southeaste­rn Turkey. An outdoor wedding party was targeted.

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