Six members of the Turkish security forces were killed and the US
consulate in Istanbul hit by a gun attack in a day of violence on Monday
blamed on Kurdish and Marxist radicals as the government pressed on its
air campaign against militants.Turkey's largest city Istanbul
was shaken by twin attacks on the US consulate and a police station that
killed one senior officer, while five police were killed in the
south-eastern Sirnak province in an escalating cycle of violence.
The
government is waging a two-pronged "anti-terror" offensive against
Islamic State (ISIS) jihadists and Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK)
militants following a wave of attacks in the country.
But so far
air strikes have overwhelmingly focused on the Kurdish militants, who
have struck back by attacking the Turkish security forces and leaving a
2013 ceasefire in tatters.
Four
Turkish police officers were killed in a roadside bomb attack in the
south-eastern Silopi district of Sirnak province bordering Iraq and
Syria blamed on Kurdish militants, Turkish media said.
Meanwhile,
in a separate incident, one Turkish soldier was killed when Kurdish
militants attacked a military helicopter with rocket launchers as it was
transporting personnel in Sirnak's Beytussebap district, the Dogan news
agency said.
Twin attacks rock Istanbul
However
the violence also spread to Istanbul, with the authorities blaming an
attack on the US consulate on the outlawed Marxist Revolutionary
People's Liberation Party-Front (DHKP-C), and an attack on a police
station on the PKK.
Ankara has on occasion linked the leftist-orientated PKK to the DHKP-C.
A
suspected suicide bomber detonated a vehicle packed with explosives at a
police station in the Sultanbeyli district on the Asian side of
Istanbul just after midnight, wounding ten people, three of them police,
the governor's office said in a statement.
Clashes with police
then continued throughout the night as other militants fired on the
police station. Police took cover behind walls and behind their armoured
vehicles to engage in pitched battles with the militants, television
pictures showed.
Beyazit Ceken, head of the police bomb disposal
department, was wounded in the clashes and died of his injuries in
hospital, the governor's office said. Two militants were also killed in
the clashes, it added.
Meanwhile, two armed individuals early on
Monday launched a gun attack against the well-fortified US consulate in
the quiet district of Istinye on the Bosphorus on the outskirts of
Istanbul.
An operation was launched to capture the two militants
and one of the attackers - a woman - was later captured wounded, the
governor's office said, while the other female suspect was at large.
The
official Anatolia news agency named her as Hatice Asik, 42, a member of
the outlawed DHKP-C who had been planning a suicide bombing.
The
DHKP-C has carried out a string of attacks in Turkey in the past,
including claiming a 2013 suicide attack on the US embassy in Ankara.
The
authorities have targeted suspected members of DHKP-C as well as IS and
the PKK in a succession of "anti-terror" raids in the last two weeks.
A statement by a consulate spokesperson confirmed that there had been a "security incident" near the mission.
"The Consulate General remains closed to the public until further notice," the statement said.
'Turkey protecting ISIS'
The
state-run Anatolia news agency said over the weekend that so far 390
"terrorists" have been killed in the air campaign in Turkey and northern
Iraq with 400 wounded.
The PKK's insurgency for greater rights
and powers for Turkey's Kurdish minority began more than 30 years ago
and has left tens of thousands dead.
The PKK is designated as a
terrorist organisation by Turkey, the EU and the United States but
Ankara's Western allies have urged it to show restraint in the
onslaught.
Senior PKK figure Cemil Bayik told the BBC in an
interview Monday that Turkey was trying to protect IS by fighting the
PKK, who are bitterly opposed to the jihadists.
"They are doing it to limit the PKK's fight against ISIS. Turkey is protecting ISIS," he said.
According
to an AFP toll, 28 members of the security forces have been killed in
violence linked to the PKK since the current crisis began.
The
government has also vowed to begin strikes against ISIS jihadists in
Syria alongside US forces who have now started arriving to use the
well-located Incirlik Turkish air base in the south of the country.
Washington
has long been pushing its historic ally Turkey to step up the fight
against ISIS, something Ankara had been reluctant to do.
But Turkish officials have vowed that a wider fight against ISIS will start in the coming days.
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