‘PKK blast’ kills two in Turkey; Officer knifed to death hailed as hero

Turkish police officers carry the coffin of killed police officer Sinan Acar on August 14, 2017 during his funeral ceremony at the police department headquarters in Istanbul. The officer was stabbed to death near his post in Istanbul on Sunday by a suspected member of the Daesh group, Turkish media said. (AFP)
Updated 14 August 2017
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‘PKK blast’ kills two in Turkey; Officer knifed to death hailed as hero

ANKARA: Two civilians working on a construction site in Turkey’s southeast were killed on Monday in a bomb blast blamed on the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), state media said.
The two workers lost their lives when their vehicle was struck by a roadside bomb in the Semdinli district of the southeastern Hakkari province, which borders Iran and Iraq, the state-run Anadolu news agency said.
It said the attack was carried out by the PKK, which has waged an insurgency against the Turkish state in the southeast for over three decades that has claimed tens of thousands of lives.
It observed a cease-fire from 2013 but fighting resumed again in summer of 2015. Hundreds of members of the Turkish security forces have been killed since, and army has claimed killing thousands of militants.
The PKK is classified as a terror group by Turkey, the EU and the US.
Ankara has been waging a remorseless campaign in the last months to destroy the PKK and the Interior Ministry said in its latest update Monday that 28 of the group’s militants had been killed and 14 surrendered in the last week alone.
There were angry reactions from across the political spectrum in recent days when a 15-year-old schoolboy was shot dead by the PKK in clashes in the northeastern Trabzon region.
Meanwhile, Istanbul’s police chief on Monday hailed as a hero a 24-year-old officer stabbed to death by a suspected member of Daesh, who had been arrested for allegedly planning a suicide attack.
Sinan Acar was attacked with a knife by the suspect, who has not been named, after the man was brought by car for questioning to the headquarters of Istanbul police late Sunday.
Acar later died of his wounds while the suspected Daesh member was shot dead on the spot by other police officers.
Speaking at a funeral ceremony for the slain officer, police chief Mustafa Caliskan said Acar and his colleagues had prevented a potentially significant attack by arresting the suspect.
“The man arrested was someone who was the subject of an international search,” said Caliskan. “We think that a very serious attack was prevented.”
“It must be known that in this country people like Sinan will live on,” he said at the ceremony also attended by Istanbul Gov. Vasip Sahin.
It was not immediately clear how the suspect managed to keep a knife while being taken into custody.
At the funeral, Acar’s mother, overcome by emotion, was supported by a female police officer, an AFP correspondent said. He will later be buried in his native Bursa region.
Turkey was hit in 2016 by a succession of attacks that left hundreds dead in the bloodiest year of terror strikes in its history.
The attacks were blamed on Daesh terrorists as well as the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) who have battled the Turkish state in an insurgency lasting more than three decades.
Last month, anti-terror officers in Istanbul detained dozens of alleged Daesh members, several of whom were said to be preparing a “sensational attack” in Turkey, police said.
An attack by a terrorist on an elite nightclub in Istanbul just 75 minutes into New Year’s Day in 2017 left 39 people dead, mainly foreigners.
There has since been a lull in similar attacks, but tensions and high security remain in big cities.


Gulf countries offer support to Yemen’s legitimate government, Saudi security

Updated 5 sec ago
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Gulf countries offer support to Yemen’s legitimate government, Saudi security

  • Qatar, Kuwait say their security is based on the security of Saudi Arabia and the GCC
  • Bahrain said it had confidence in the leadership of Saudi Arabia and the UAE to contain differences

LONDON: Gulf and Arab countries on Tuesday offered support to the internationally recognized government in Yemen after the UAE withdrew its forces from the country.

The statements were issued after the military coalition supporting Yemen’s government carried out airstrikes on a shipment of weapons and vehicles destined for southern separatist forces.

The shipment arrived in the port of Mukalla on board two vessels from Fujairah in the UAE.

The Emirates was asked by Rashad Al-Alimi, head of Yemen’s presidential council, to withdraw its troops from Yemen within 24 hours.

Saudi Arabia said the separatists, operating under the Southern Transitional Council and supported by the UAE, posed a direct threat to the Kingdom’s national security and regional stability by recently seizing territory in the  governorates of Hadramaut and Al-Mahra.

Qatar said it was following the developments “with keen interest.”

A foreign ministry statement said Doha fully supported the legitimate Yemeni government and stressed the importance of preserving Yemen's unity and  safeguarding the interests of the Yemeni people.

It added that the security of Saudi Arabia and the security of the member states of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) “constitute an inseparable part of the security of the State of Qatar, reflecting the deep-rooted fraternal ties and shared destiny that unite the GCC states.”

The ministry commended the statements issued by Saudi Arabia and the UAE “which reflect a commitment to prioritizing the interests of the region.”

Kuwait also offered “unwavering support” for Yemen’s government and said the security of Saudi Arabia and GCC is the basis of its own national security.

Its foreign ministry praised the “responsible approach” taken by both Saudi Arabia and the UAE.

Bahrain, the current GCC chair, said it had confidence in the leadership of Saudi Arabia and the UAE “and their ability to contain any differences in viewpoints within the framework of a unified Gulf.”

The foreign ministry statement offered “unequivocal” support toward regional and international initiatives and efforts aimed at reaching a comprehensive and lasting political solution in Yemen.

Egypt said it had full confidence in Saudi Arabia and the UAE “to handle the current developments in Yemen with wisdom.”

Cairo will continue efforts toward a comprehensive political settlement for Yemen, the statement said.