(CNN)A massive power outage spread across Turkey on Tuesday, blacking out a broad swath of the country and affecting some flights.
Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said all possible causes were under investigation, including terrorism.
Trams and subways were idled in Istanbul — with more than 14 million inhabitants, the largest city in the country and the fifth largest in the world. Homes and offices were left without electricity as well.
“I am sitting in my apartment,” CNN producer Gul Tuysuz reported from Istanbul. “No lights. No electricity.”
Official won’t rule out cyberattack
The Turkish capital, Ankara, some 250 miles from Istanbul, was also affected. The outage extended to 45 of Turkey’s 81 provinces.
Turkey’s semiofficial Anadolu Agency quoted Energy Minister Taner Yildiz as saying the cause of the outage was unknown. Yildiz, speaking during a visit to Slovakia, said he could neither confirm nor deny that a cyberattack had triggered the blackout, the Anadolu Agency reported.
Flightradar24, which maps real-time flight data on the Internet, tweeted that the outage was “affecting flights,” and said 11 of its 16 air traffic monitoring systems receivers — as distinct from the country’s air traffic control system — were not working.
The Turkish Electricity Transmission Co. blamed the outage on a problem with transmission lines, Anadolu Agency reported. The utility said an investigation was in progress, as were efforts to restore power, the news agency said.
The outage began at 10:36 a.m. (3:36 a.m. ET). Nearly two hours later, according to Anadolu Agency, about 15% of the power had been restored to Istanbul and Ankara, including in some subway stations. Power also was beginning to flow again to a number of provinces that had been cut off, the agency reported.
Prosecutor taken hostage
Also Tuesday, a prosecutor in a controversial case was reportedly taken hostage by armed men at a courthouse in Istanbul.
Mehmet Selim Kiraz was assigned to the case of Berkin Elvan, a 15-year-old boy who was injured during the anti-government Gezi Park protests in June 2013.
The teen died the following March after having spent nine months in a coma. The case, with its overtones of possible police overreaction, has been politically contentious in Turkey, just as the protests themselves were.
The prosecutor was taken hostage around 12:30 p.m. Turkish time in his office on the sixth floor of the Okmeydani district courthouse, Anadolu Agency reported.
Police evacuated that floor of the building, the agency reported. Snipers were also deployed, it said.
The agency said that two gunshots were heard as officers tried to get into the prosecutor’s office, but it is not known whether anyone was hurt.
Negotiations between the gunmen and authorities were reported to be ongoing.