International News

Car bomb attack targets police headquarters in southeast Turkey

ISTANBUL, (APP/AFP) – A car bomb blamed
on Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) rebels on Friday exploded outside a police headquarters in Turkey’s southeastern town of Cizre, state media and television said.
The bomb attack caused immense damage to the headquarters of the special
anti-riot police force in Cizre, with television pictures showing an immense
plume of black smoke heading into the sky.
There was no immediate information on possible casualties but television
quoted the health ministry as saying 12 ambulances and two helicopters had been
sent to the scene.
Early pictures showed that the police building had been rendered completely
unusable by the power of the blast, reduced to a shell surrounded by a pile of
rubble.
The state-run Anadolu news agency said the bomb had gone off 50 metres
(yards) away from the building at a control post. It said the blast had been
carried out by the PKK.
The Turkish security forces have been hit by near daily attacks by the PKK
since a two-and-a-half year ceasefire collapsed in 2015, leaving hundreds of
police and soldiers dead.
The PKK has kept up its assaults in the last weeks even after the
unsuccessful July 15 coup by rogue elements in the military aimed at unseating
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
The latest attack comes two days after Turkish forces launched an
unprecedented offensive in neighbouring Syria which the authorities say is
aimed both at jihadists and Syrian Kurdish militia.
Turkey on Thursday shelled the Kurdish militia fighters in Syria, saying
they were failing to observe a deal with the US to stop advancing in
jihadist-held territory.
Ankara sees the Kurdish Democratic Union Party (PYD) and its People’s
Protection Units (YPG) militia as terror groups bent on carving out an
autonomous region in Syria and acting as the Syrian branch of the PKK.