Montreal Gazette

Bombers at peace rally ‘originated’ from Syria

Turkish president rules out no group for deadly attack’s responsibi­lity

- SUZAN FRASER

Turkey has intelligen­ce suggesting that terrorists “originatin­g” from Syria were planning to carry out attacks in Turkey, the country’s president said Tuesday, but added that no groups were being ruled out in the investigat­ion into a deadly attack on a peace rally on Saturday.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, speaking at a joint news conference with the visiting Finnish president, admitted for the first time that there were “some” government security flaws prior to the bombing attacks that killed 97 people and wounded hundreds, but said the scale of the “mistake” would emerge after an investigat­ion.

Erdogan rejected opposition parties’ calls for the resignatio­n of some officials.

The two suicide bombings came just weeks before Turkey’s Nov. 1 election, which is effectivel­y a rerun of an inconclusi­ve June election. The bombings raised fears that Turkey — a member of NATO, a candidate for European Union membership, a neighbour of war-torn Syria and the host for more refugees than any other nation — may be heading toward a period of instabilit­y.

The blasts have further polarized the country as it grapples with more than two million refugees and tries to avoid being drawn into the chaos in neighbouri­ng Syria and Iraq.

“There is certain intelligen­ce about some preparatio­ns that were made by (terrorists) entering our country and carrying out various acts — and that they originated from Syria,” Erdogan said.

The Turkish leader rejected suggestion­s from a pro-Kurdish party that the state may have had a hand in Saturday’s attack, which targeted left-wing opposition supporters and Kurdish activists, saying the accusation­s were based on gossip.

Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu has said the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) was the main focus of the investigat­ion into Saturday’s attack, which bore similariti­es to a suicide bombing that killed 33 activists at a town near the Syrian border in July. No one has claimed responsibi­lity for Saturday’s explosions.

Turkish authoritie­s earlier Tuesday banned a protest rally and march by the same trade union and civic society groups who lost friends and colleagues in Saturday’s attack, but hundreds of people defiantly gathered for the protest in Istanbul. Dogan news agency video footage showed police pushing back hundreds of demonstrat­ors trying to reach the rally to commemorat­e the 97 victims.

Plain-clothed police pushed at least two demonstrat­ors to the ground and detained them.

“Our brothers were killed! What are you doing?” a woman shouted.

Several small protests — involving dozens to a few hundred people — have erupted across Turkey since Saturday, with people expressing their grief and their grievances. Some have turned into antigovern­ment demonstrat­ions, with participan­ts expressing dismay that no official has taken responsibi­lity for the security lapse and resigned.

As with previous terror probes, Turkish authoritie­s imposed “partial secrecy” on the investigat­ion, which restricts even defence lawyers’ access to informatio­n. The government has also banned the publicatio­n of images of the aftermath of the attack.

The youngest victim was nineyear-old Veysel Atilgan, who died in an explosion outside Ankara’s main train station along with his father. He was buried Monday following an emotional ceremony at his school.

 ?? AKGUL/AFP/GETTY IMAGES
YASIN ?? Suicide bombings on a peace rally in Ankara on Saturday have raised a feud between the government and Turkey’s main pro-Kurdish party to a new level, leading to widespread protests like this one Monday in Ankara.
AKGUL/AFP/GETTY IMAGES YASIN Suicide bombings on a peace rally in Ankara on Saturday have raised a feud between the government and Turkey’s main pro-Kurdish party to a new level, leading to widespread protests like this one Monday in Ankara.

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