The aftermath of the Oct. 10 Ankara suicide bombings that claimed 102 lives |
NEWS/TURKEY
Prosecutors in Turkey
have confirmed what many have long suspected: that the Islamic State of Iraq
and al-Sham (ISIS) was behind Turkey ’s
worst terrorist attack. The ISIS leadership in Syria
is believed to have ordered a Turkish cell from Gaziantep
to carry out the twin suicide bombings in Ankara
on 10 October.
In a written statement on Wednesday 28 October,
the Ankara Public Prosecutor's Office said evidence indicated the Ankara bombers staged the
attack to create huge unrest in the run-up to the Nov. 1 General Election.
A week earlier, prosecutors had named one of the
suicide bombers as Yunus Emre Alagöz, the brother of Şeyh Abdurrahman Alagöz
who had carried out another suicide bombing in Suruç on 20th July
that killed 33 people and wounded more than 100.
The investigation has yet to confirm the identity
of the second Ankara
bomber, thought to be Ömer Deniz Dündar. Their names have long been on lists of
suspected Turkish ISIS militants.
The Ankara
bombing bore a remarkable similarity to the Suruç attack: both involved suicide
bombers who detonated their vests in the midst of a public gathering, and the
materials used in the bombs are identical, indicating a single group behind
them.
The moment the Oct 10. blasts went off, as people sang & danced at a peace rally in the heart of Ankara |
Dozens of suspects have been arrested in the current
investigation, which has led police office to uncover five depots used by
Turkish ISIS cells. Among the items found were hundreds of explosives, a dozen
suicide vests and 2.5 tons of ammonium nitrate used to make bombs.
Three weeks ago, two suicide bombers detonated
their bomb-laden vests killing 102 people and injuring hundreds of others who
had gathered for a huge peace rally in Ankara .
It was Turkey ’s
deadliest ever terrorist attack.
The ‘Labour,
Peace and Democracy’ rally had been organised by trade unions, professional
groups and left wing activists, along with two of Turkey’s leading opposition parties,
the centre left CHP and the Kurdish-focussed HDP. It was scheduled to take
place in Sıhhiye Square ,
in the heart of the Turkish capital.
İzzettin Çevik cradles his wife after his sister & daughter are killed in the blast |
Ankara Central Station, near to the square and
just a few hundred metres from the headquarters of Turkey ’s National Intelligence
Organisation (MİT), was the designated meeting point. People had started to
gather there from early morning. Some attendees sang songs, while others danced
the halay or waved flags as they waited for more people to
arrive and the rally to start.
At 10.04 the first bomb went off just outside the
station, followed by a second blast nearby less than a minute later, causing
carnage. As bystanders tried to help, police were accused of preventing
ambulances reaching the wounded and using tear gas against those at the rally.
The police claim they were simply trying to clear the area to ensure no further
casualties from any further bombs that went off.
No one has claimed responsibility for the
bombings. However suspicion quickly fell on ISIS
due to the similarities with the Suruç attack.
Yet immediately after the bombing, AKP Prime
Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu used the phrase “terror
cocktail” in a television interview, suggesting that the perpetrators were
drawn from a wide spectrum of terror groups seeking to destabilise Turkey and
prevent AKP from regaining power.
Davutoğlu hinted that ISIS
was in collusion with the Kurdish terrorist group PKK and the armed Marxist Revolutionary
People’s Liberation Party-Front (DHKP-C). He added that the hand of Syrian
leader President Bashar al-Assad and the Syrian Kurdish rebel force PYD could also
be felt in the recent terror attacks on Turkish soil.
Turkish PM Ahmet Davutoğlu suggests a "terror cocktail" behind suicide bombings |
The claims were dismissed as ludicrous by many commentators
and opposition politicians, who pointed to the fact many of the factions the
AKP leader mentioned were currently at war with each other.
Figen Yüksekdağ, co-chair of the Peoples’
Democratic Party (HDP), said “terror
cocktail” is ‘a political concept
that pushes the limits of logic and insults people’s intelligence’.
The irrationality of Davutoğlu’s speculations
about the perpetrators was side-stepped by pro-AKP media and commentators, who jumped
on his theory and quickly promoted it more widely. Yeni Safak columnist Abdulkadir
Selvi wrote: “Why do some think it is
unnecessary to try to find PYD-PKK involvement alongside of [ISIS] in the Ankara bombing? Aren’t
PYD-PKK involved in such affairs? They have deals with Assad, work with Iran . They are
in accord with Russia .
Now they are getting guns from the US .”
Huge lapse in Turkish
security intelligence
Many believe the AKP government is seeking to tar
its enemies with the same terror brush to avoid focus on its own failings. In a
country where there is a huge police presence for all public gatherings,
particularly those anti the government, the lack of security at the Ankara peace rally was highly
noticeable.
People outside Ankara Central Station remember those killed, demand AKP government answer for its failings, 17 Oct |
Questions have also been asked how the two bombers
could travel across the country, have breakfast in a nearby café and then
detonate two deadly bombs under the nose of MİT, without the Turkish security
forces knowing anything about their plans.
Many families whose sons or daughters have been
radicalised have freely offered information to the Turkish authorities in the
past. A major cell was known to exist in Adıyaman over two years ago, whose
members are said to be behind a host of bombings in Turkey this year. The families
claim little has been done to either prevent the radical Islamist groups from
operating or to locate their children.
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