Bomb in Turkey Kills 5, Wounds 68

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The New York Sun

ANKARA, Turkey — A car bomb targeting soldiers killed five people and wounded 68 — including 30 troops — yesterday in the Kurdish-dominated southeastern city of Diyarbakir, officials said.

A bus carrying the troops was passing a five-star hotel when suspected Kurdish rebels detonated a remote-controlled car bomb, authorities said.

Five civilians were killed, including two high school students who were leaving a building where they were taking courses for university entrance exams.

Thirty soldiers were among the 68 people wounded, Governor Huseyin Avni Mutlu of Diyarbakir, said, according to the private Dogan news agency.

“A bomb left in a car … was set off with a remote control. It was a very strong one. It was targeting a military service bus,” Mr. Mutlu said.

Authorities blamed the blast on Kurdish rebels. Police said two suspects reportedly escaped the scene but authorities denied news reports that they were captured.

The attack — which shattered the windows of surrounding buildings and could be heard two miles away — appeared to be in retaliation for three airstrikes by Turkish warplanes against Kurdish rebel shelters in northern Iraq last month.

The pro-Kurdish Firat news agency reported the Kurdistan Workers Party’s leaders in Iraq had declared big cities in Turkey targets.

There have been two explosions in Turkey’s commercial center, Istanbul, in the past two weeks, killing one and injuring nine. No one has claimed responsibility for the attacks but Governor Muammer Guler of Istanbul blamed Kurdish rebels.

The rebel group, known as the PKK, has battled for autonomy in southeastern Turkey for more than two decades, a campaign that has left tens of thousands of dead. The group uses strongholds in northern Iraq for cross-border strikes.

In October, Parliament authorized Turkey’s military to strike back at rebels across the border. Turkish warplanes took off from an air base in Diyarbakir minutes after yesterday’s attack, Firat reported on its Web site. It was not clear if the jets were on a bombing mission.

The Turkish military claimed it killed up to 175 rebels in the first air assault December 16, but the PKK denied the figure. Turkey has carried out the strikes largely based on military intelligence provided by America.


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