Monday 14 March 2016

Turkey Vows To Bring Terror 'To Its Knees' Police suspect Kurdish militants, at least one of them female, were behind the second attack in Ankara in a month.

Police suspect Kurdish militants, at least one of them female, were behind the second attack in Ankara in a month.



Turkey's president has pledged that "terrorism will be brought to its knees" following a car bomb attack in Ankara which killed at least 34 people.
Following the deadly explosion - the third terror attack in the capital in just five months - Recep Tayyip Erdogan said: "Our people should not worry, the struggle against terrorism will for certain end in success."
"Initial indications" suggest that Kurdish militants were behind the suicide bombing, which also left 125 wounded - 19 of them seriously.
Officials also believe that one of the bombers was a woman.
Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said: "We have concrete information on the terrorist group behind the attack. We will soon have results from the inquiry, and will make them public."
The blast happened in Kizilay, a major shopping and transport hub in an area close to the prime minister's office, as well as foreign embassies and the Turkish parliament.
Ankara is the capital of Turkey
A car, packed with explosives, blew up close to a bus - causing several other vehicles to catch fire and the windows of shops in the bustling square to shatter.
World leaders, including David Cameron, have condemned the bombing - with Russian President Vladimir Putin branding the incident as "inhuman", and the US describing it as a "horrific act".
Turkey's pro-Kurdish party The Peoples' Democratic Party, often accused of being a wing of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party, said it shares "the huge pain felt along with our citizens".
Australia's ambassador to Turkey, James Larsen, was in a car just 20m (65ft) away from where the bomb was detonated.
"It was an appalling thing for him to witness, being so close, but he's fine," Australian Foreign Minister Julia Bishop said.
"It really does bring it home to us that a terrorist attack can take place at any time, anywhere. We utterly condemn these barbaric attacks on civilian populations," she told the Nine Network.
Dogan Asik, 28, was on a bus when the explosion happened at about 6.45pm local time on Sunday - and described being thrown to the back of the bus from the force of the blast.
A court in Ankara ordered a ban on access to Facebook, Twitter and other sites in Turkey after images from the blast scene were shared on social media.

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