Turkey's Erdogan links coup suspects, PKK to bomb attacks
Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan on August 18 accused followers of a US-based Islamic cleric he blames for last month's coup attempt of being complicit in attacks by Kurdish militants in Turkey's southeast which killed 10 people.
Turkey's President Tayyip Erdogan addresses his supporters in front of the Presidential Palace in Ankara, Turkey, August 10, 2016. |
Erdogan has blamed a network led by Fethullah Gulen, a cleric in self-imposed exile in Pennsylvania since 1999, for the failed rebellion launched by rogue soldiers.
His remarks were prompted by bomb attacks on August 17-18 that left 10 dead, mostly police and soldiers, and wounded 300 in southeastern Turkey in an escalation of violence that officials blamed on Kurdish PKK militants.
"You don't have to be fortune teller to see that the FETO is behind the latest PKK attacks in terms of sharing information and intelligence," Erdogan said.
FETO is the term Ankara uses for Gulen's network.
In the largest blast, a car bomb tore through a police station in the city of Elazig early on August 18 as officers arrived for work. Three officers were killed and 217 people were wounded, 85 of them police officers, officials said.
A plume of black smoke rose above the city after the blast which uprooted trees and gouged a large crater outside the police complex. Offices in the police station were left in ruins and filled with smoke after the bomb exploded in front of the complex, destroying part of the facade, CNN Turk footage showed.
"We have raised the state of alarm to a higher level," Prime Minister Binali Yildirim said at the scene of the attack, where a crowd chanted "Damn the PKK!"
Less than four hours later, a roadside bomb believed to have been planted by the PKK blasted a military vehicle in Bitlis province, security sources said. The blast killed three soldiers and a member of a village guard militia and wounded another seven soldiers, they said.
In Van province, two police officers and one civilian were killed and 73 people were wounded on August 17 when a car bomb exploded near a police station, the local governor's office said.
No one immediately claimed responsibility for the bombings, but Yildirim said there was no doubt they were carried out by PKK militants, listed as a terrorist group by Turkey, the United States and the European Union.
The White House condemned the attacks in a statement on August 18. National Security Council spokesman Ned Price said U.S. officials "are in close touch with Turkish authorities", and the two countries will continue to work together to combat terrorist groups.