Turk assaulted during soldier’s funeral
ANKARA, Turkey — Protesters assaulted the leader of Turkey’s main opposition party Sunday during a funeral for a soldier who was slain during clashes with Kurdish rebels. The politician was not hurt, party officials said.
People threw punches at Republican People’s Party leader Kemal Kilicdaroglu as security officials tried to escort him away from the funeral in a village outside Ankara, television footage showed. A crowd then surrounded a house where he was taken for safety.
Kilicdaroglu was later driven out of the village in an armored vehicle.
The Ankara governor’s office said legal action had been launched against the assailants.
The soldier was among four killed Saturday in a clash against the rebels of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party near Turkey’s border with Iraq. The group is considered a terror organization by Turkey, the United States and the European Union.
Kilicdaroglu’s secular Republican People’s Party won control of Ankara and Istanbul in local elections held March 31. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s ruling party previously governed in the two cities.
Erdogan led the Justice and Development party’s divisive election campaign, portraying the local races as a matter of national survival and equating opposition parties with terrorists.
The funeral assault cast a shadow on a rally in Istanbul to celebrate the win by the Republican People’s Party’s mayoral candidate, which ended the ruling party’s and its Islamist predecessor’s 25-year hold on the city of 15 million people.
Ekrem Imamoglu, 48, was confirmed as mayor on Wednesday after two weeks of appeals and recounts requested by the ruling party. He has taken a conciliatory tone, promising to bring people together after the elections.