Muscat Daily

Turkey accuses PKK over Istanbul attack

Police arrested a Syrian woman accusing her of planting a bomb that killed six people

-

Istanbul, Turkey - Turkey on Monday accused a Syrian woman of planting a bomb that killed six people in Istanbul,

blaming the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) of carrying out the attack.

Two girls, aged nine and 15, were among those killed when the bomb exploded shortly after

4pm (1300 GMT) on Sunday in Istiklal Avenue, home to smart boutiques and European consulates. More than 80 other people were wounded.

“The person who planted the bomb has been arrested,” Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu said in a statement broadcast by the official Anadolu news agency early on Monday.

“According to our findings, the PKK terrorist organisati­on is responsibl­e,” Soylu said.

The PKK, blackliste­d as a terrorist group by Ankara and its Western allies, has waged a deadly insurgency for Kurdish self-rule in southeaste­rn Turkey since the 1980s.

It denied any role in the latest attack.

“Our people and the democratic public know closely that we are not related to this incident, that we will not directly target civilians and that we do not accept actions targeting civil

ians,” the group said in a state

ment published by the Firat news agency, close to the PKK.

Police, quoted by private NTV television, said the chief suspect is a Syrian woman working for Kurdish militants. Forty-six people were detained in total, police said.

Police footage shared with Turkish media showed a young woman in a purple sweatshirt

being apprehende­d in an Istanbul

flat. Police, cited by NTV, named her as Alham Albashir and said she was arrested at 02:50am in an Istanbul suburb. Local media said she was a trained PKK intel

ligence operative.

‘Order from Kobane’

So far, there has been no claim of responsibi­lity.

“We believe that the order for the attack was given from

Kobane,” Soylu said, referring to a city in Syria near the Turkish border.

Pkk-affiliated Kurdish militants control most of northeaste­rn Syria and in 2015, Kurdish fighters drove Islamic State militants out of the city.

Turkey’s NTV channel also shared surveillan­ce footage of a young woman dressed in

trousers and wearing a loose

black scarf who ran away into the crowd on Sunday afternoon.

Justice minister Bekir Bozdag told A Haber television that a woman had been sitting on a

bench for more than 40 minutes, ‘then she got up’, leaving a bag.

“One or two minutes later, an explosion occurred,” he said.

On Monday, all the benches had been removed from Istiklal Avenue, where residents laid red carnations at the scene of the blast, some wiping away tears and others speaking of their fear of further attacks in the run-up to elections next June.

“We need more security!” said Idris Cetinkaya, who works at a nearby hotel and who came to pay his respects.

‘Live with fear’

“The police just searched my bag when I got here, but that’s the

first time in a year. Millions of people come here, anything could happen at any second!”

Istiklal Avenue was previously targeted during a campaign of nationwide bombings in 2015-16 that were blamed mostly on the Islamic State group and outlawed Kurdish militants, killing nearly 500 people and wounding more than 2,000.

On Sunday, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan denounced the ‘vile attack’ that had the ‘smell of terror’ shortly leaving for the G20 summit in the Indonesian resort island of Bali.

Kemal Ozturk, a shopkeeper, is among those who fear another explosion ahead of presidenti­al and legislativ­e elections in seven months’ time.

“In election period it can happen,” the 42-year-old told AFP.

“We live with fear.”

 ?? (AFP) ?? People lay flowers at a makeshift memorial for the victims of Sunday’s explosion at the busy shopping street of Istiklal in Istanbul on Monday
(AFP) People lay flowers at a makeshift memorial for the victims of Sunday’s explosion at the busy shopping street of Istiklal in Istanbul on Monday

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman