Kurds Clash with Police in Istanbul, Border Security to Increase after Terror Attack

Local Editor
Turkish police deployed water cannon and tear gas to disperse a demonstration led by Kurds who were angry that central authorities were not able to prevent a terrorist act committed in a border town by a suspected "ISIL" suicide bomber.
The military wing of the Kurdish independence movement, the Kurdistan Workers' party [PKK] accused the government of "supporting and cultivating" "ISIL", following the attack which killed at least 31 people and injured scores of others in the town of Suruc, on the southern border with Syria.
Further, the Kurdish parliamentary wing, the People's Democracy Party [HDP] which increased its vote share in the parliamentary election earlier this summer, agreed with PKK despite the Turkish government publicly condemning the suicide attack.
"The administrators in Ankara who hurl threats at the HDP and pat the heads of "ISIL" are partners in this barbarity," said a statement by Selahattin Demirtas, the HDP co-chair.
A suspected "ISIL" suicide bomber attacked a group of university-aged activists in the mostly Kurdish town of Suruc in southeastern Turkey earlier on Monday.
Once news of the fatal explosion spread, thousands Kurdish Turks gathered in the Gazi district of central Istanbul. Several members of the group chanted "[President Recep Tayyip] Erdogan is a killer" and "Erdogan is a collaborator," as well as vowing "Vengeance for the PKK."
Accordingly, a large contingent of riot police was ordered onto the streets immediately, using water cannon, tear gas, and flash bangs to force the protesters on the run.
However, eyewitnesses claimed the measures were "disproportionate" and "indiscriminate," but there were also reports of protesters lobbing stones at police stations.
The violence appeared to dissipate after the initial crackdown, only to resurface after sunset, with eyewitnesses claimed ongoing running clashes between protesters and law enforcement officers.
Kurdish leaders had accused Erdogan of using Kurds as a buffer against "ISIL", and even backing the Takfiris in their destruction of the autonomous Kurdish area, which had sprung up in northern Syria since conflict began in the country in 2011.
On his part, Turkish PM Ahmet Davutoglu had promised to boost security along the country's border with Syria, after the attack that killed 30 people.Investigators think the blast was caused by a female suicide bomber from the "ISIL" group.
Correspondents said Turkey was cracking down on the militants, after previously being accused of ignoring them.
Source: News Agencies, Edited by website team
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