The first of two explosions rips through leftist and pro-Kurdish protesters staging an anti-government peace rally in Ankara on October 10, 2015, killing at least 95 people. Dokuz 8 / AFP
The first of two explosions rips through leftist and pro-Kurdish protesters staging an anti-government peace rally in Ankara on October 10, 2015, killing at least 95 people. Dokuz 8 / AFP

At least 95 killed in bombings at Turkish peace rally



ANKARA // At least 95 people were killed in the Turkish capital on Saturday when bombs set off by two suspected suicide attackers ripped through leftist and pro-Kurdish activists gathering for an anti-government peace rally.

It was the deadliest attack in the country’s recent history.

The bombings, which took place near Ankara’s main train station, ratcheted up tensions ahead of Turkey’s November 1 snap elections which were already soaring amid the government’s offensive on Kurdish militants.

Bodies of the killed activists were seen strewn across the ground after the blasts, with the banners they had been holding for the “Work, Peace and Democracy” rally lying next to them.

The bombings killed at least 95 people and left 246 wounded, 48 of whom are in intensive care, according to an updated toll issued by the prime minister’s office on Saturday night.

Turkey’s president Recep Tayyip Erdogan denounced the “heinous attack”, saying it was aimed at “our unity and our country’s peace.”

There were scenes of chaos after the blasts, as ambulances raced to get to the wounded and police cordoned off the area around the train station.

“We heard one huge blast and then one smaller explosion and then there was a great movement and panic. Then we saw corpses around the station,” said Ahmet Onen, 52.

“A demonstration that was to promote peace has turned into a massacre, I don’t understand this,” he said, sobbing.

Turkish police fired in the air to disperse demonstrators angered by the deaths of their fellow activists from the scene.

Amateur footage broadcast by NTV television showed smiling activists holding hands and dancing and then suddenly falling to the ground as a huge explosion went off behind them.

Reports said that hundreds of people in Ankara had rushed to hospital to donate blood for the victims.

With international concern growing over instability in the key Nato member, EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini urged Turkey to “stand united against terrorists.”

French president Francois Hollande condemned the “odious terrorist attack” while Russian president Vladimir Putin passed his condolences to Mr Erdogan.

Turkish prime minister Ahmet Davutoglu was hosting a meeting of top officials, including powerful spy chief Hakan Fidan, in the early afternoon to discuss the attack.

The pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) was to have been one of several groups that was to have taken part in the pro-peace protest.

“We are faced with a huge massacre. A barbaric attack has been committed,” said the HDP’s leader Selahattin Demirtas.

He blamed a “mafia state” and a “state mentality which acts like a serial killer” for the attack.

The attack comes with Turkey on edge ahead of November 1 polls and a wave of unrest over the past few months.

An attack in the predominantly Kurdish town of Suruc on July 20 targeting pro-HDP activists and blamed on ISIL killed 32 people and wounded a hundred others.

The militant Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) accused Ankara of collaborating with ISIL and resumed attacks on the Turkish security forces after observing a two-year ceasefire.

Over 140 members of the security forces have since been killed while Ankara claims to have killed over 1,700 Kurdish militants in weeks of bombardments of PKK targets in south-east Turkey and northern Iraq.

With conspicuous timing, the PKK Saturday announced it would suspend all attacks — except in self defence — ahead of the polls.

“Heeding calls from Turkey and abroad, our movement has decided on a state of inactivity by our guerrillas, unless our people and our guerrilla forces are attacked,” Kurdistan Communities Union (KCK), an umbrella movement that includes the PKK, said in a statement.

The HDP performed strongly in the last election on June 7, winning 80 seats in parliament to deprive Mr Erdogan’s ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) of an outright majority for the first time since it came to power in 2002.

The AKP then failed to form a coalition in months of talks, prompting Mr Erdogan — who had been hoping for a large majority to push through reforms to boost his powers — to call another election on November 1.

The office of Mr Davutoglu said that he had cancelled election campaigning for the next three days.

* Associated Press