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Turkish army captain killed in PKK attack

August 22, 2015 By administrator

194942An army captain was killed when militants of the  Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) attacked a military outpost in southeastern Turkey late Aug. 21.

PKK militants targeted a gendarmerie outpost in the Beytüşşebap district of the Şırnak province at 9.30 p.m. Captain Ali Alkan and two more soldiers were wounded in the clash that continued for an hour, Turkish media reports said.

Captain Alkan died at the Şırnak Military Hospital at 2.00 a.m. on Aug. 22, as the army launched an operation to find the perpetrators who fled the area after the attack.

Before Alkan’s death, 55 Turkish security personnel were killed in terrorist attacks across Turkey over the past month, while Turkey claim the security forces have killed 771 militants from the PKK in operations within the country and in northern Iraq, according to official figures.

Meanwhile, suspected members of the PKK threw two bombs outside the regional headquarters of the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) in the southeastern city of Diyarbakir.

The attack severely damaged a police water cannon truck parked outside, injuring a policeman who was inside, the official Anatolia news agency reported.

10 customs officials and a driver were reported missing in the Van region of eastern Turkey close to the border with Iran, state-run Anadolu Agency reported, saying it was possible they had been abducted by the PKK.

The PKK has been staging daily attacks against the Turkish armed forces as the military keeps up air raids and military operations against its strongholds in southeast Turkey as well as northern Iraq.

Over 50 members of the Turkish security forces have been killed in attacks blamed on the PKK but the government has vowed to maintain its campaign against the group.

Source: hurriyetdailynews.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: attack, PKK, Turkey

Turkey: Another Train in southeast Turkey struck by mine in third such attack in past month

August 20, 2015 By administrator

train-in-southeast-turkey-struck-by-mine-in-third-such-attack-in-past-month_8704_720_400A cargo train traveling from Muş to the Erzincan province was struck by a mine in Bingöl, southeast Turkey, in the newest suspected Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) attack.

The explosion that occurred at 11:30 am left four rail carts severely damaged, though no injuries or deaths were reported. The railway has been closed down while security forces search for the militants who fled the scene.

Thursday’s incident was the third mine attack to have struck trains in the past month as deadly clashes continue to cause turmoil in Turkey’s predominantly Kurdish southeast.

On July 30th, the Trans-Asia train traveling from Ankara to Tehran was struck by a land mine. Also in Bingöl, on August 9, a train carrying cargo and passengers was the target. All incidents ended with no casualties or injuries.

The PKK has waged an armed separatist war against Turkey for over 30 years, resulting in more than 40,000 casualties, and until late July, had maintained a rocky truce with Ankara since 2013.

source: BGN

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: attack, train, Turkey

Turkish media boss attacked by gunmen in İstanbul

August 20, 2015 By administrator

226833Murat Sancak, chief executive officer of the pro-government Star Media Group, was attacked on Thursday by unidentified gunmen while in his car in the Hadımköy neighborhood of İstanbul.

Unidentified assailants opened fire on the car that Sancak was in, news reports said. Several bullets hit the car. Sancak and his bodyguards were unharmed.

Police teams were sent to the area to investigate after the incident. Report Zaman

The Turkish Journalists’ Association (TTGC in a statement condemned the attack on Sancak. It was pointed out in the statement that recent acts of terrorism in the country are also targeting journalists and media groups and that the attacks aim to disrupt the peace in Turkey. The TGC also called on the authorities to find the perpetrators and emphasized that the organization is always against these kind of attacks.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: attack, İstanbul, media

US Fox News: Turkey’s PKK strikes outrage US military in Iraq

August 11, 2015 By administrator

 (Photo: AP)

(Photo: AP)

After granting the US permission to use Turkish air bases for strikes against radical terrorist group the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) in Syria, Turkish air forces began heavily pounding bases of the terrorist Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) in northern Iraq, causing ripples of dismay and outrage among senior officials within the US military, the US-based Fox News Channel has said.

According to a Fox News report on Tuesday, Turkey launched its air strikes against the PKK “with only 10 minutes notice to their American partners.”

“The U.S. had barely enough warning to make sure its own forces were out of the way, according to a military source with knowledge of the tension Turkey’s attack caused in the Combined Air and Space Operations Center [CAOC], the allied headquarters in the air war against ISIS [ISIL],” the online version of the Fox report said.

“A Turkish officer came into the CAOC, and announced that the strike would begin in 10 minutes and he needed all allied jets flying above Iraq to move south of Mosul immediately,” Fox reported a military source as saying, who then described events that took place “in the center, in a secret location in the Middle East.” “We were outraged,” Fox quoted the source as saying.

In addition to targeting forces engaged in the fight against ISIL, US officials believed the Turkish military’s sudden move raised the risk of friendly fire casualties, the report added.

“We had U.S. Special Forces not far from where the Turks were bombing, training Kurdish Peshmerga fighters,” the source said. “We had no idea who the Turkish fighters were, their call signs, what frequencies they were using, their altitude or what they were squawking [to identify the jets on radar].”

When the Turkish officer returned the next day to inform his international partners of another strike, US military officials made their objections clear. The Turkish liaison officer was sent away, but not before a back-and-forth in which US leaders demanded the specific flight plans of the attacking Turkish warplanes and the Turkish officer sought the locations of the US trainers.

The coalition air force officers in the ops center refused to share the sensitive information.

“No way we were giving that up,” said the military source, according to Fox News. “If one of our guys got hit, the Turks would blame us. We gave the Turks large grids to avoid bombing. We could not risk having U.S. forces hit by Turkish bombs.”

Critics of the new agreement between the US and Turkey say the deal gives Ankara cover to carry out strike missions against Kurdish fighters in Iraq and even Syria, where Kurds have won hard-fought gains against ISIL. While the Kurdish fighters have been remarkably effective fighting the terrorist army, Turkey remains their nemesis and fears the recent expansion of Kurdish control along the border could provide Kurds more incentive to form their own country in the future.

Turkey began a campaign of air strikes on Kurdish militants in northern Iraq, the PKK and ISIL fighters in Syria in July, in what acting Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu dubbed a “synchronized fight against terrorism.”

The Turkish military began bombing terrorist PKK targets in northern Iraq late last month, the first such strikes since a settlement process with the Kurds was launched in 2012, in response to the killing of two policemen in southeastern Turkey by the youth wing of the PKK.

The PKK is held as a terrorist organization by the US government and many EU nations.

“The PKK’s Syrian affiliate [the People’s Protection Unit (YPG)] has been the leading ground force against ISIS in Syria, and a close ally of the U.S. military,” the report said, adding “In Iraq, Kurdish Peshmerga fighters, separate from the PKK and YPG, have been praised by many U.S. lawmakers for their success in fighting ISIS [ISIL].”

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: attack, outrage, PKK, Turkey, US

Istanbul: US consulate in Turkey targeted as wave of attacks kills 9

August 10, 2015 By administrator

STANBUL/DIYABAKIR: Two women shot at the U.S. consulate in Istanbul Monday and at least eight people were killed in a wave of separate attacks on Turkish security forces, weeks after Ankara launched a crackdown on ISIS, Kurdish and far-left militants.

The NATO member has been in a heightened state of alert since starting its “synchronized war on terror” last month, including airstrikes against ISIS fighters in Syria and Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) militants in northern Iraq. It has also rounded up hundreds of suspected militants at home.

A far-left group that killed a Turkish security guard in a 2013 suicide bombing of the U.S. embassy in Ankara claimed it was involved in Monday’s attack.

The Revolutionary People’s Liberation Army-Front (DHKP-C), considered a terrorist organization by the United States and Turkey, said one of its members was involved in the attack, and called Washington the “arch enemy” of the people of the Middle East and the world.

Police with automatic rifles cordoned off streets around the U.S. consulate in the Sariyer district on the European side of Istanbul, following the gun attack there.

Ahmet Akcay, a resident who witnessed the attack, told Reuters that one of the women fired four or five rounds, aiming at security officials and consulate officers.

“Police were shouting ‘drop your bag, drop your bag.’ And the woman was saying: ‘I will not surrender,'” Akcay said.

“The police warned her again: ‘Drop your bag or we will have to shoot you,’ and the woman said: ‘Shoot.'”

One of the two women was later captured wounded, the Istanbul governor’s office said.

The Dogan news agency said the injured woman was aged 51 and had served prison time for being a suspected member of the DHKP-C. Reuters could not immediately verify the report.

“We are working with Turkish authorities to investigate the incident. The Consulate General remains closed to the public until further notice,” a consulate official said.

On the other side of Istanbul, a vehicle laden with explosives was used to attack a police station, injuring three police officers and seven civilians, police said.

One of the attackers was killed during the bombing, while two others and a police officer died in a subsequent firefight, the Istanbul governor’s office said. Broadcaster CNN Turk said the officer was a senior member of the bomb squad who had been sent to investigate the attack.

Shooting continued into Monday morning in the Sultanbeyli district on the Asian side of the Bosphorus waterway, which divides Istanbul, as police carried out raids.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for either of the attacks, but U.S. diplomatic missions and police stations have been targeted by far-left groups in Turkey in the past.

The DHKP-C, whose members are among those detained in recent weeks, claimed responsibility for a suicide bombing at the U.S. embassy in Ankara in 2013 which killed a Turkish security guard.

Turkey opened its air bases to the U.S.-led coalition against ISIS last month after years of reluctance and carried out its own bombing raids, stepping up its role after a suspected ISIS suicide bomber killed 32 people in the town of Suruc near the Syrian border.

Casting the operations as a war on terrorist groups “without distinction,” it simultaneously launched airstrikes on PKK targets in Iraq and in southeastern Turkey, and has arrested more than 1,300 people suspected of links to Islamist, Kurdish and far-leftist groups in recent weeks.

It has been a high-risk strategy for a country straddling Europe and the Middle East which depends on tourism for around a tenth of its income, leaving it exposed to the threat of reprisals.

Violence between the security forces and suspected militants intensified in the mainly Kurdish southeast Monday.

Four police officers were killed when their armored vehicle was hit by roadside explosives in the town of Silopi, the governor’s office in the province of Sirnak said.

A soldier was also killed when Kurdish militants opened fire on a military helicopter in a separate attack in Sirnak, the military said in a statement. Security sources said at least seven other soldiers were wounded in the attack, which came as the helicopter took off.

The military launched an air campaign against PKK camps in northern Iraq on July 24 after a resurgence of militant attacks. State-run Anadolu news agency said Sunday that more than 260 militants had been killed, including senior PKK figures, and more than 400 wounded by Aug. 1.

The violence has left a peace process with the PKK, begun by President Tayyip Erdogan in 2012, in tatters. Erdogan said last month the process had become impossible, although neither side has so far declared the negotiations definitively over.

The PKK, designated a terrorist group by Ankara, the United States and European Union, launched its insurgency in 1984 to press for greater Kurdish rights. More than 40,000 people have been killed in the conflict.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: attack, Turkey, US

Five killed as PKK continues its attacks in Turkey

August 7, 2015 By administrator

ŞIRNAK – Anadolu Agency

pkk-attackFive people, including a soldier, were killed while one police officer was seriously injured in attacks launched by the  Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK).

In the southeastern province of Şırnak’s Silopi district, police attempted to detain people, prompting resistance from neighborhood residents that included reported members of the youth wing of the  Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK). Three people died in ensuing clashes.

Another armed conflict erupted when alleged members of the Patriotic Revolutionary Youth Movement (YDG-H), the youth wing of the PKK, fought back with long-barreled weapons and rockets at police officers who had arrived at an YDG-H trench off of Nusaybin Avenue in Şırnak’s Cizre district at around 12:30 a.m. on Aug 7.

The police responded with fire while an injured officer was taken to the Cizre Public Hospital for treatment.

PKK militants also launched an attack on a highway in the eastern province of Ağrı’s Doğubayazıt district, killing a Turkish special sergeant. An Iranian PKK militant was also killed in the ensuing clash, Anadolu Agency reported.

Over the past three weeks, Turkey has been struck by a series of violent attacks against its security forces, leaving scores of people dead and injured.

In the Uludere district of Şırnak, a civilian was injured after PKK militants fired shots with long-barreled weapons and rockets at the Uludere District Governor’s Office, the Uludere District Police Department and the Uludere District Gendarmerie Command around 11 p.m. on Aug 6.

Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) Şırnak deputy Ferhat Encü was trapped inside the governor’s office building at the time due to a 10-minute-long exchange of fire between gendarmerie forces and PKK militants.

PKK attacks gendarmerie station with car bomb

In the eastern province of Van, members of the PKK fired shots with long-barreled weapons and rockets at a gendarmerie station in Van’s Başkale district at around 9:15 p.m. on Aug 6, with no casualties reported.

The militants detonated a car bomb, crashing it into a military vehicle after clashes erupted, while soldiers responded with fire during the shootout.

Near the Beytüşşebap district of Şırnak, PKK militants hijacked a minibus carrying food supplies to gendarmerie forces, blocking off a road that leads out to Kato Mountain at around 2 p.m. on Aug 6.

In the southeastern province of Mardin, members of the YDG-H fired shots with long-barreled weapons at police officers in Mardin’s Nusaybin district on Aug 6, with no casualties reported. The police fired tear gas to disperse the militants.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: attack, PKK, Turkey

Turkey: Kurdish freedom fighters PKK launched another attack today killing 2 soldier wounded 31

August 2, 2015 By administrator

_84624438_turkeyagriiran4640815BBC Report Two Turkish soldiers have been killed and 31 wounded in a suicide attack by Kurdish PKK militants, the Turkish military says.

A tractor laden with explosives was driven at a military police station, a statement said.

The attack happened early on Sunday near the town of Dogubayezit in Agri province, near the border with Iran.

Since 24 July, Turkey has carried out hundreds of air raids on PKK bases on both sides of the Iraq-Turkey border.

A Turkish state news agency, Anadolu, said the tractor was carrying two tons of explosives that were detonated by a suicide bomber.

Turkey’s army said in a statement that “long-range guns” were also found. Four of the injured were in a serious condition.

The statement said the Karabulak Gendarmerie Station was hit at around 03:00 local time on Sunday (midnight GMT).

Images in the Turkish press showed a badly-damaged building with the roof destroyed.

One report said the blast was so strong that houses in a village several hundred metres away were hit by debris and some residents were slightly injured.

The Dogan news agency added that militants also set up ambushes on roads to prevent medical teams getting to the scene.

There has been no comment from the PKK so far.

AFP news agency said it would be the first time the group was accused of deploying a suicide bomber during recent clashes.

Turkey says the group was behind a number of attacks in the last two weeks:

  • On Sunday, a Turkish soldier was killed and four others hurt when a mine exploded under their convoy in Mardin, in the south-east of the country
  • On Friday, five people were killed, two of them suspected PKK militants, when a police station and a railway line were targeted
  • On Thursday, three troops died in southern Sirnak province after gunmen opened fire on their convoy

Turkey’s official news agency says about 260 Kurdish fighters have been killed in strikes in northern Iraq and Turkey since 24 July. It has also targeted positions held by the Islamic State group.

At least six people were killed and several wounded in further Turkish air strikes on Saturday east of Erbil, said local officials.

The pro-PKK Firat news agency described an attack on the village of Zerkel as a “massacre”.

Iraqi Kurdish President Massoud Barzani said: “We condemn the bombing, which led to the martyrdom of the citizens of the Kurdish region, and we call on Turkey to not repeat the bombing of civilians.”

The Turkish military on Sunday said it had investigated the incident and dismissed claims that there could have been civilian casualties in Zerkel, Reuters reported.

 

Filed Under: News Tagged With: attack, Kurd, PKK, Turkey

Turkey PKK, attacked Police Headquarters: 2 killed

July 30, 2015 By administrator

4444444PKK, attacked with rifles Pozantı District Police Department building. The police also clashed on the response. Short-term clash killed two police officers at the scene, while two PKK members were killed trying to enter the garden from different points of safety building. The two PKK members who carried out the attack fled taking advantage of the darkness of the night. Large-scale operation was launched in the district to arrest the terrorists. Adana reinforcement of the teams from the Police Department was dispatched. 1 with two Kalashnikov guns and three grenade over the terrorists out. However, on one diagnosed after bomb disposal experts were asked to bomb. Bombs on the terrorists killed in the Police Department Crime Scene Investigation teams with the entrance staircase was defused after a long struggle.

Provincial Police Director Cengiz Zeybek also get information about the conflict going to Pozantı District Police Department, investigation was made. Chief Cengiz Zeybek, said that the two police officers killed in the conflict.

Source: cumhuriyet.com.tr

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenia to get CSTO support if attacked, attack, Kurd, PKK, Turkey

Columnist Pinar Tremblay Expose Turkish racism & Attacks on Chinese escalate in Turkey

July 21, 2015 By administrator

By Pinar Tremblay, published in Al Monitor

Boys wave East Turkestan flags during a protest against China near the Chinese Consulate in Istanbul, Turkey, July 5, 2015. China warned its citizens travelling in Turkey to be careful of anti-Beijing protests, warning them that some Chinese tourists have recently been "attacked and disturbed". The notice, posted on the Ministry of Foreign Affairs website on Sunday, said that there have recently been "multiple" demonstrations in Turkey targeting the Chinese government. The notice gave no details regarding the protests, but comes after Turkey's government expressed concern about reports that Muslim Uighur people in China's far western region of Xinjiang had been banned from worship and fasting during the holy month of Ramadan.  REUTERS/Osman Orsal  - RTX1J343

Boys wave East Turkestan flags during a protest against China near the Chinese Consulate in Istanbul,

On July 1, news broke that a group of five men attacked a Chinese restaurant named Happy China with sticks and stones in the center of Istanbul. The attackers were heard to say, “We do not want a Chinese restaurant here, get out of our town!” The owner, Cihan Yavuz, said in a TV interview, “We are all Turks here; our chef is a Uighur Turk. We serve Muslim East Asian tourists and rarely ever have Chinese customers. We do not serve alcohol. We never received any warnings of an attack. But I see it may not be possible for us to earn a living here.”

On July 4, in the western city of Balikesir, a group protested against China for persecuting Uighur Turks and hung an effigy of late Chinese leader Mao Zedong.

On the same day, a group of ultranationalists attacked a Korean tourist they assumed was Chinese in the popular Istanbul tourist district of Sultanahmet.

To add insult to injury, Devlet Bahceli, chairman of the Nationalist Action Party (MHP), gave an interview to popular journalist Ahmet Hakan on July 8 about the attacks. Bahceli said, “Our nationalist youth is sensitive to injustices in China. They should have the freedom to exercise their democratic rights. These are young kids. They may have been provoked. Plus, how are you going to differentiate between Korean and Chinese? They both have slanted eyes. Does it really matter?” His racist and ignorant statement caused an uproar in the Turkish and international media.

His interviewer tried to excuse Bahceli’s comments as a joke, but when taken together with the banner displayed in multiple locations by the group Idealist Hearths (Ulku Ocaklari) that read, “We crave Chinese blood,” we must question if Bahceli’s statement was taken as a tacit approval of violence in the name of protest among ultranationalist and Islamist youth.

On July 9, Thailand’s honorary consulate in Istanbul was attacked by 200 men affiliated with the East Turkestan Solidarity Group. The violence captured on video is quite telling about the nature of these hate crimes. Men with rocks and thick wooden planks are seen breaking the windows and pounding on the doors while calling “God is Great” and waving East Turkestan flags. Their justification was that Thailand had repatriated Uighurs to China.

Following the growing social pressure, the Idealist Hearths group released an official statement explaining that it had not attacked any tourists. Al-Monitor interviewed 13 young nationalists along with senior MHP members. They all concurred that the MHP views all tourists in the country as their guests. All eschewed the terms racism or fascism and issued press releases along those lines.

However, below this hospitality argument, there was a strong undercurrent of anger. One senior MHP official told Al-Monitor on condition of anonymity, “For years we have been the silent victims of our own leadership trying to silence the nationalist youth. For example, in Ankara University, for years several members of our movement were told not to go to school during final exams, because there might be trouble with the pro-Kurdish groups. They obey and pay the price of not graduating in a timely fashion.”

Firat Kargioglu, a scholar at Firat University in Elazig specializing in nationalism, told Al-Monitor, “When we look at the anti-Chinese protests in Turkey, we see that they may go beyond peaceful protest with racist intonations in their slogans, banners and symbols. This rhetoric easily escalates into violence, tainting the movement.”

Hasan Kocabey, the chairman of a rising nationalist civil society organization called the Turanci Movement Platform, gave a television interview in which he claimed that real nationalists could tell who is of their own blood and that the belittling comments against the movement in the press were the result of media manipulation. He also explained that the discrimination Uighur Turks face is not because they are Muslims, but rather because they are not Chinese. It was a racial issue in his eyes. Kocabey said his group had protested the Chinese restaurant by leaving a baby doll covered in blood on a table but had not committed any violence. He added that nationalists had not attacked a Korean nor any other tourists, but a scuffle between a pro-Kurdish group and the Turkish nationalists had been misrepresented in media.

Not many people in Turkey found these explanations convincing, and these anti-Chinese demonstrations and attacks against Asians had immediate consequences. On July 8, the Chinese Philharmonic Orchestra canceled concerts scheduled for Aug. 16 in Istanbul. On July 13, the Turkish police announced it would provide extra security for an art exhibition titled “Chubby Women” by Chinese artist Xu Hongfei, for fear of attacks.

While many Turks on social media approached the issue from a humorous angle, covert racism can still be traced even in the savviest commentary. Among some of the most popular remarks:

  • Arda Turan, a famous soccer player now wearing Atletico Madrid’s colors, asked for prayers on Instagram for East Turkestan.
  • Well-known comedian Sahan Gokbakar posted a picture of the Chinese flag overtaking East Turkestan with the message “Freedom for East Turkestan” on his Facebook page.
  • Kocabey tweeted, “Say we are racists, so what?”
  • Journalist Asli Aydintasbas tweeted a rather mind-boggling link from Yahoo Answers, writing, “For MHP members: A guide to differentiate between Chinese, Japanese and Koreans.”
  • Aydintasbas had hundreds of retweets, yet no comments questioning whether this is subtle racism. Indeed, another Twitter user posted a sarcastic cartoon of tips on how to racially differentiate Japanese, Korean and Chinese people.

A deep-rooted everyday racism dominates Turkish social media, even among those critical of ultranationalist groups, disguised as concern about other Asian groups. It has been quite interesting to watch as only a few newspaper columnists have bothered to ask why and how random violence on the streets of Turkey is becoming increasingly normal.

Violence against women has skyrocketed and is well documented. Alevis face not only discrimination, but also fear persecution on multiple levels every day, including several recent instances of their houses being marked, all over Turkey.

Kurds have suffered years of discrimination against their cultural and national identity, also well documented. The latest event was the hundreds of attacks on the pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party during the June election campaign.

Religious minorities, Jews, Armenians, Greeks, Yazidis and Syriacs along with illegal immigrants face constant discrimination that has erupted into violence on several occasions in modern Turkish history.

The LGBT community also suffers from a shocking rise in murder rates as well as attacks against its members. A quick review on social media during Ramadan 2015, which coincided with June’s LGBT pride month, shows jarring threats against members of the LGBT community. Not only have they faced police brutality in public spaces, but open threats against their freedom of expression go unpunished. It is quite common for post-attack rhetoric to focus on justification for why these events happened, rather than prevention and aid for the victims.

Acts of violence are not limited by ethnicity, gender or religious affiliation in Turkey. For example, health care workers have been seeking police protection at an increasing rate as disgruntled patients and their families brutally attack them.

There is an undeniable pattern of violence in public spaces against those perceived as weak in Turkey. One of the reasons is that the perpetrators get away with it both socially and legally, with a slap on the wrist at most.

Discrimination is so insidious that even victims fail to detect it. Over time, with no proper hate-crime legislation, almost all subcultures are left vulnerable in Turkey. Failing to recognize the pattern and dealing with each case separately helps neither past nor potential future victims.

Pinar Tremblay
Columnist

Pinar Tremblay is a columnist for Al-Monitor’s Turkey Pulse and is a visiting scholar of political science at California State Polytechnic University, Pomona. She is a columnist for Turkish news outlet T24. Her articles have appeared in Time, New America, Hurriyet Daily News, Todays Zaman, Star and Salom. On Twitter: @pinartremblay

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: attack, chianese, racism, Turkey

President Serzh Sargsyan condemns bomb attack in Suruc, Cumhurbaşkanı Serj Sarkisyan Suruç’taki bombalı saldırıyı kınadıklarını açıkladı

July 20, 2015 By administrator

Hrant Kasparyan / Democrat News – Yerevan

Armenian President

Armenian President

Sanliurfa Suruç held today, and 30 people lost their lives after the bomb attack, condolences and condemning the massacre of Turkey’s neighboring countries began arriving messages.

Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan issued a written message, condolences to the relatives of those who lost their lives in the Suruc announced that they condemned the attack while the survivors wishing a speedy recovery to the injured.

As regards the attack Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan condolence message transmitting Armenian President Sargsyan said, “We condemn any manifestations of terrorism regret,” he said.

According to a statement from the Presidential Press and Information Office in Armenia, President Sargsyan statement gave the following statements:

“Turkey’s Suruç that occurred on July 20 in the city of Sanliurfa and dozens of people regret that we learned of the explosion that cost him his life.

We condemn all kinds of manifestations of terrorism regret.

Please accept my condolences for the incident today.

Condolences to the relatives of those killed and the courage, and I wish a speedy recovery to the injured survivors. ”

In Turkish

Ermenistan’dan Suruç Katliamı’na kınama
Cumhurbaşkanı Serj Sarkisyan Suruç’taki bombalı saldırıyı kınadıklarını açıkladı

Hrant Kasparyan / Demokrat Haber – Erivan

Şanlıurfa’nın Suruç İlçesi’nde bugün gerçekleştirilen ve 30 insanın hayatını kaybettiği bombalı saldırının ardından, Türkiye’nin komşu ülkelerinden taziye ve katliamı kınayan mesajlar gelmeye başladı.

Ermenistan Cumhurbaşkanı Serj Sarkisyan bugün yayımladığı yazılı mesajda, Suruç’ta hayatını kaybedenlerin yakınlarına başsağlığı, hayatta kalan yaralılara ise acil şifa dileyerek saldırıyı kınadıklarını açıkladı.

Saldırıya ilişkin olarak Türkiyeli mevkidaşı Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’a taziye mesajı ileten Ermenistan Cumhurbaşkanı Sarkisyan, “Terörün her türlü dışavurumunu esefle kınıyoruz” dedi.

Ermenistan Cumhurbaşkanlığı Basın ve Enformasyon Dairesi’nden yapılan açıklamaya göre, Cumhurbaşkanı Sarkisyan açıklamasında şu ifadelere yer verdi:

“Türkiye’nin Şanlıurfa kentindeki Suruç İlçesi’nde 20 Temmuz’da meydana gelen ve onlarca kişinin hayatına mal olan patlamayı üzülerek öğrendik.

Terörün her türlü dışavurumlarını esefle kınıyoruz.

Bugün meydana gelen olaya ilişkin taziyelerimi kabul edin.

Hayatını kaybedenlerin yakınlarına başsağlığı ve cesaret, hayatta kalan yaralılara ise acil şifa diliyorum.”

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenian, attack, president, Suruc, Turkey

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