Outrage in Turkey after mother, baby killed by ‘PKK roadside bomb’

Members of Turkish forces secure the scene of an explosion on the road linking the cities of Diyarbakir and Bingol, in southeastern Turkey. (File photo: AP)
Updated 01 August 2018
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Outrage in Turkey after mother, baby killed by ‘PKK roadside bomb’

  • The governor’s office blamed the attack on the “separatist terrorist organization”
  • Erdogan attended the funeral in the family’s home Anatolian region of Sivas

ISTANBUL: Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Wednesday vowed to fight Kurdish militants to the “last terrorist” after a mother and her 11-month-old baby were killed in a roadside bomb attack blamed on the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK).
Mother Nurcan Karakaya, 25, whose husband is a soldier, and her child Bedirhan Mustafa, were killed late Tuesday when a bomb detonated as their car passed by in the far southeastern province of Hakkari, the governor’s office said.
The governor’s office blamed the attack on the “separatist terrorist organization,” the phrase used by officials to describe the PKK.
In a sign of the severity of the attack for the Turkish authorities, Erdogan attended the funeral in the family’s home Anatolian region of Sivas where he comforted the bereaved husband and father Serkan Karakaya.
“There is no giving up on chasing them (the PKK). And, God willing, our fight against them will continue until the last terrorist,” Erdogan told mourners in a ceremony carried live on TV.
He once again vowed to sign into law reintroducing the death penalty in Turkey, if parliament approved it.
Erdogan has long threatened such a move, even though many analysts consider it unlikely as restoring capital punishment would end Turkey’s bid to join the EU.
Using popular European names, he commented that “we don’t care what Hans and George say about this issue. What God says, we look at this.”
The PKK has waged an insurgency inside Turkey since 1984 that has claimed some 40,000 lives. It is banned as a terrorist organization by Ankara, the United States and the European Union.
Following the collapse in 2015 of a two-year cease-fire — which had included talks with the PKK’s jailed leader Abdullah Ocalan — fighting intensified between Turkish security forces and the PKK in the southeast.
Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu also hit back in an angry tirade against the PKK, referring to them as “baby-killers” in a term used frequently at the peak of the insurgency in the 1990s.
“The PKK were baby-killers 40 years before. From its leaders, founders, from the highest man to the lowest man, the PKK were baby-killers yesterday and they are today,” he was quoted as saying on Wednesday by state-run news agency Anadolu.


Ramadan brings a season of grief after an Israeli strike wiped out most of a Gaza family

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Ramadan brings a season of grief after an Israeli strike wiped out most of a Gaza family

  • In the Gaza Strip, Ramadan has become a season when wartime losses hit especially deep for the many families grieving loved ones killed by Israeli forces
GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip: As the sun sets, Saddam Al-Yazji, his wife and their daughter sip a noodle soup, breaking their daily Ramadan fast in Gaza City. They sit around a folding table set up in the dirt at the foot of a towering pile of rubble, twisted metal and concrete slabs that was once their home.
Buried under the debris are the bodies of much of their family.
The three are virtually the family’s only survivors. Al-Yazji’s parents, his three brothers and his sister, along with most of their children, and his wife’s parents and siblings — 40 relatives in total — were all killed in a single strike when Israeli forces bombed the house in December 2023.
The Islamic holy month of Ramadan is traditionally a time for family, with large, festive gatherings for iftar, the sunset meal that ends the daily fast. In the Gaza Strip, it has become a season when wartime losses hit especially deep for the many families grieving loved ones killed by Israeli forces, which have been fighting Hamas for more than two years.
“I look at photos of our gatherings in Ramadan and cry,” the 35-year-old Al-Yazji said. “Where is my family? All are wiped out.”
“It’s the third Ramadan without them.”
Family once had large Ramadan meals
During Ramadans before the war, Al-Yazji’s father, Kamel Al-Yazji, brought all his children and grandchildren together for iftar around a large table piled with meat and rice and other dishes, recalled Saddam’s wife, Heba Al-Yazji.
Ramadan, when Muslims fast from dawn to dusk, is a month dedicated to religious reflection and worship. It also builds community, with the giving of charity.
The elder Al-Yazji was a former judge with the Palestinian Authority and a well-known sports figure in Gaza, serving as chairman of the Palestinian Athletics Federation. Saddam Al-Yazji earned a living running a supermarket on the ground floor of the four-story family home in Gaza City’s Rimal neighborhood.
The airstrike came only a few months into the ferocious Israeli bombardment that was launched after the Hamas-led attack on southern Israel in October 2023. The house was leveled on top of everyone inside.
“We were in the same house, in other part of the house,” Saddam Al-Yazji said. “We survived miraculously.”
The only other survivors were the daughter and the pregnant wife of one of his brothers. Among the dead were 22 children.
Some of the bodies were retrieved at the time. One of Al-Yazji’s brothers is buried in a grave marked with sticks at the foot of the destroyed house. Around 20 relatives remain buried under the rubble.
After the strike, the couple and their daughter, 11-year-old Maryam, lived in a tent elsewhere in Gaza City for much of the war. During the previous two Ramadans, they tried as much as possible to come visit the rubble of their home and have iftar there.
When a ceasefire deal came into effect in October, the three moved to a tent next to their old home.
“Life is empty,” Heba Al-Yazji said. “The war took everything from me. We wish we had died with them rather than remain alone.”
Most families feel a loss
Throughout the war, Israel has struck homes and tent camps sheltering Palestinians, often killing large numbers of families at once. Israel says it targets Hamas militants, though it rarely says who were the specific targets.
Israel’s campaign has killed more than 72,000 people, nearly half of them women and children, according to the Gaza Health Ministry. The ministry, which is part of the Hamas-led government, maintains detailed casualty records seen as generally reliable by UN agencies and independent experts, though it does not give a breakdown of civilians and militants.
Around 8,000 more are still buried under the rubble of destroyed homes, according to the ministry. Retrieving most of those bodies was out of the question when airstrikes and ground assaults were raging. Under the ceasefire, recovery efforts have increased, though they are still hampered by a lack of heavy equipment.
The Israeli campaign was triggered by the Hamas attack that killed some 1,200 people in Israel and took more than 250 others hostage. The hostages have been released, mostly as part of ceasefire agreements.
Almost everyone in Gaza has lost at least extended family members. Nearly the entire population of 2.1 million is homeless, with most living in vast tent camps. More than 80 percent of the strip’s buildings have been damaged or destroyed.
A landscape of rubble that was once the Rimal district extended all around the small Ramadan table where the three surviving Al-Yazjis ate their meal.
Saddam Al-Yazji recalled the “great dining table” of his family’s past Ramadan gatherings and how they all looked forward to it every year.
“I feel like I have betrayed them by being alive,” he said.