Los Angeles Times

Attack on restaurant in Iraq kills at least 1 Turkish envoy

-

IRBIL, Iraq — A gunman opened fire inside a restaurant in the northern Iraqi city of Irbil on Wednesday, killing at least one diplomat from the Turkish Consulate, Turkey’s state-run news agency and Iraqi media said.

Turkey’s Anadolu Agency reported the shooting but did not provide further details. The state-run Iraqi news agency identified him as the deputy consul and said several members of his entourage were also killed in the shooting.

Earlier, Turkish media reports said two people were killed while a third was wounded in the attack. There was no immediate confirmati­on from the Turkish Foreign Ministry.

The rare shooting occurred at HuQQabaz, a popular restaurant. Iraqi Kurdish news outlet Rudaw said the restaurant is on the airport road in Irbil.

Rudaw published a photo showing the front window facade of the restaurant shattered and police standing outside. It also published a photo of a car parked outside with bloodstain­s on it.

It said that security and emergency officials were responding to the incident and that the scene was on lockdown.

There was no immediate claim of responsibi­lity for the shooting.

Turkey on Wednesday launched airstrikes against Kurdish insurgents in northern Iraq, killing at least seven members of the Kurdistan Workers Party, or PKK — a group Ankara labels a terrorist organizati­on because of the insurgency it has been waging, mostly in southern Turkey.

The PKK has been waging an insurgency for more than three decades, and its fighters have a base in northern Iraq, near the border with Iran.

Turkey has regularly bombed the mountainou­s area where the PKK is based and in March targeted a meeting of senior PKK leadership there, injuring a senior commander and killing three others.

Ankara accuses the PKK of launching assaults into Turkey from the Kurdistan region and has kept bases in Iraq to target the militants’ stronghold for decades under an agreement it had reached with the previous Iraqi government under Saddam Hussein in which the two countries agreed to use each other’s territorie­s to safeguard their borders.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States