Los Angeles Times

Thousands across Turkey protest deadly bombings

Blasts that claimed at least 95 lives set off political accusation­s ahead of elections.

- By Glen Johnson Johnson is a special correspond­ent.

SANLIURFA, Turkey — Protesters took to the streets across Turkey on Sunday, a day after two apparent suicide bombings killed nearly 100 demonstrat­ors in the capital and set off incendiary political recriminat­ions just three weeks before general elections.

Thousands of flag-waving demonstrat­ors gathered near the scene of Saturday’s devastatin­g blasts, which occurred at a peace rally just outside Ankara’s main rail station. Many chanted “Murderer government!” — reflecting sentiment among critics of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan that his administra­tion has pursued a military campaign against Kurdish separatist­s to stir up nationalis­t passions.

More marches and sit-ins protesting the attack were held in Istanbul, the country’s biggest city and commercial center. Labor unions, some of which had helped organize Saturday’s rally calling for an end to the Kurdish conflict, vowed large-scale strikes.

Adding to tensions, the Turkish military announced more airstrikes Sunday targeting Kurdish militants’ hide-outs in the country’s southeast and in the mountains of northern Iraq. A day earlier, the Kurdistan Workers Party, or PKK, had announced a unilateral ceasefire in advance of the Nov. 1 vote.

Among those who marched in protest Sunday, there was anger over perceived security lapses in protecting the targeted gathering and widespread skepticism over prospects for a thorough investigat­ion.

“These kinds of attacks are never investigat­ed well,” said Hassan Sanli, a prominent labor activist who attended Sunday’s rally in the capital. “They will never find the murderers and instigator­s.”

With Turkey observing three days of official mourning, the names of the identified dead were read out one by one on television. At least 95 people were confirmed dead and 246 injured, with 65 of those needing life support to survive, according to the semioffici­al Anatolia news agency.

Images of carnage continued to circulate on social media, despite government attempts to disrupt access to platforms including Twitter and Facebook. For some, the attack, among the deadliest in the history of the modern Turkish state, created an ominous sense of more political violence and turmoil to come.

“If these crises, bombings and [bloodshed] continue, we will all be crippled in Turkey,” said 23-year-old Ahmet Yilmaz, interviewe­d by cellphone in an Ankara hospital bed where he was awaiting surgery to remove shrapnel from Saturday’s attack.

No group has claimed responsibi­lity for the blasts, but news reports cited intelligen­ce officials deeming the militants of Islamic State the likely perpetrato­rs.

The group was implicated in a similar attack in July in the border town of Suruc that killed more than 30 people, mainly pro-Kurdish activists. However, hardline ultranatio­nalist elements have lately become more visible, staging attacks on Kurdish political party offices and other targets.

Turkey’s already polarized political parties traded accusation­s of responsibi­lity for the attack. The leader of the pro-Kurdish People’s Democratic Party, Selahattin Demirtas, accused the ruling Justice and Developmen­t Party of complicity in fomenting violence.

“If I were the prime minister of this country, I would go in front of the people of Turkey, apologize 1,000 times and resign,” said a furious Demirtas, according to BGN News. “We will not allow you to become our killers.”

Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu sharply dismissed the allegation­s and accused the pro-Kurdish party of ignoring the “martyrdom” of Turkish police and soldiers killed in fighting with Kurdish militants.

The government has so far indicated that balloting will go ahead as scheduled, but some said even if the vote is held, its outcome has been compromise­d by violence and intimidati­on.

“This bombing shows quite clearly that the election will not be conducted in a free, fair and healthy way,” said Omur Bolat, who served as a volunteer polling observer during June’s vote.

That voting cost the Justice and Developmen­t Party its parliament­ary majority.

 ?? Cagdas Erdogan Associated Press ?? THE BROTHER of Sarigul Tuylu, 35, a mother of two who was killed in the bombings in Ankara, cries over her coffin in Istanbul. Saturday’s attack took place at the site of a peace rally in the Turkish capital.
Cagdas Erdogan Associated Press THE BROTHER of Sarigul Tuylu, 35, a mother of two who was killed in the bombings in Ankara, cries over her coffin in Istanbul. Saturday’s attack took place at the site of a peace rally in the Turkish capital.

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