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Deadly attack on Turkish police station

January 14, 2016

An attack has been launched on a police station in Turkey's troubled southeast region. The incident comes amid escalating violence between Ankara and Kurdish separatists.

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Diyarbakir - Türkische Polizei vor einem DBP Gebäude
Image: Reuters/D. Ebenbichler

The provincial governor's office in the Cinar district of Diyarbakir region said on Thursday that an overnight attack on a police compound had left five people dead and 39 wounded.

Officials blamed the attack on the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), a terrorist organization with a strong foothold in the southeastern part of Turkey. The PKK has been engaged in a decades-long insurgency against Ankara.

Turkish newspaper "Daily Sabah" reported that police personnel and civilians - including women and children - were among the wounded in the attack, which took place before dawn in Cinar's police headquarters and several adjacent buildings.

Violence intensifies

The attack began when a car bomb exploded, causing one of the nearby buildings to collapse.

The violence comes shortly after the Turkish military released a report saying that 448 members of the PKK had been killed since mid-December. That report was published the same weekend Turkish forces raided a home in eastern Van province following a tip that PKK militants were plotting a large-scale attack on government buildings.

The attack also comes two days after a suicide bomb explosion in Istanbul, which killed at least 10 people, all of them German tourists.

Dorian Jones commentary on attack in Turkey southeast

blc/rc (Reuters, AFP)