Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Bomb rocks Turkish city; 31 killed, 100 hurt

- DESMOND BUTLER Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Bassem Mroue, Lori Hinnant, Ayse Wieting and Mohammed Rasool of The Associated Press and staff members of Bloomberg News.

ISTANBUL — Authoritie­s suspected the Islamic State extremist group was behind an apparent suicide bombing Monday in southeaste­rn Turkey that killed 31 people and wounded nearly 100.

Turkish officials vowed to strike back at those behind the attack in the city of Suruc targeting a group of political activists who wanted to help the shattered Syrian city of Kobani.

“We are face to face with a terrorism incident,” Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said. “We have the willpower to find and certainly punish those who are responsibl­e.”

There was no immediate claim of responsibi­lity, but a senior government official said Turkey suspected the Islamic State was behind the blast as retaliatio­n for Turkey’s recent steps against the militants.

The midday explosion took place as the Federation of Socialist Youths was wrapping up a news conference on plans to help rebuild Kobani, a witness said.

Suruc is just across the border from Kobani, the city that was the site of fierce battles between Kurdish groups and Islamic State fighters.

The fall of Kobani, heavily populated by Syrian Kurds, was a big defeat last year for the militants since they establishe­d control over large parts of Iraq and Syria. Its ruins have become a symbol of Kurdish resistance.

Members of the pro-Kurdish People’s Democratic Party also blamed Islamic State for the attack and renewed calls for a crackdown on extremists in the border region.

“The security forces in the area have been negligent,” party lawmaker Leyla Guven told Haberturk TV. “If an Islamic State militant can blow himself up in the middle of these people, everybody should be held accountabl­e for this.”

If the Islamic State was behind the bombing, it would represent the group’s most serious attack inside Turkey. A female suicide bomber with suspected ties to the Islamic State blew herself up in a tourist district of Istanbul in January, killing a police officer and wounding another.

In recent weeks, Turkey has taken new steps against the Islamic State, blocking websites and arresting suspected followers in the country, officials said.

Witnesses of Monday’s blast described scenes of carnage and shock. Because the activists’ news conference was being recorded, the attack and its immediate aftermath were captured in widely circulated video.

Fatma Edemen said the federation of about 200 youths had been pressing for more access to Kobani to help with reconstruc­tion.

The group was chanting “Long live the resistance of Kobani!” when the explosion tore through the crowd, she said.

“One of my friends protected me. First I thought, ‘I am dying,’ but I was OK,” the 22-yearold Edemen said by phone as she headed to the hospital to get treatment for minor injuries to her legs. “I started to run after I saw the bodies.”

She said her group had believed it was relatively safe to rebuild Kobani.

“Our friends went there, and it didn’t seem dangerous at that time. We couldn’t even think something like that would happen,” she said, adding that they had hoped to build a kindergart­en or something else for children in the city.

“We wanted to do something, but they would not let us,” she added.

Islamic State militants carried out surprise attacks in Kobani last month that killed more than 200 people.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who was in Cyprus on an official visit, was briefed on the investigat­ion, according to the state-run Anadolu Agency.

“I, personally and on behalf of my nation, condemn and curse those who perpetrate­d this savagery,” Erdogan said in a news conference broadcast on Turkish television.

In a statement on Twitter, Deputy Prime Minister Yalcin Akdogan said such “despicable terrorist attacks” would never achieve their goal.

The United States strongly condemned the attack, noting that many of the victims had stepped forward to help reconstruc­tion efforts in Kobani.

“We express our solidarity with the Turkish government and the Turkish people and reaffirm our undeterred resolve to fight against the sheer threat of terrorism,” White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest said.

The casualty figures were released by the prime minister’s office and the Interior Ministry.

The senior Turkish official said authoritie­s had evidence that the attack was a suicide bombing. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak on the record.

Another explosion Monday south of Kobani killed three Kurdish officials and occurred as the militiamen were removing mortar shells from a dump, said Mustafa Bali, a Kurdish official. Another Kurdish official had initially described the blast as a bomb.

Suruc also is the site of the largest refugee camp in Turkey. Nearly 2 million Syrians have crossed into the country to flee the fighting.

More than 220,000 Syrians have been killed and at least 1 million wounded since the country’s crisis began in March 2011, according to the United Nations.

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