In Turkey Four dead in gun attacks, no militants involved
Ankara is jittery after a group affiliated with the Kurdistan Workers
Party (PKK), which has waged a three-decade insurgency for Kurdish
autonomy, killed 37 people on Sunday in a suicide car-bomb attack in the
city centre.
Four people were killed in two separate shootings in the Turkish capital Ankara
on Friday, a city on edge since a suicide bombing last weekend, but
militants were not involved in either incident, local newspapers and an
official said.
A policeman shot a policewoman in
the Dikmen neighbourhood, near military and government buildings, the
Hurriyet newspaper said, without giving details. A government official
confirmed one person had been shot by police but said it was "for certain" not an attack involving militants.
In an unrelated incident, a man shot his brother and sister-in-law before shooting himself, Hurriyet said.
Ankara is jittery after a group affiliated with the Kurdistan Workers Party
(PKK), which has waged a three-decade insurgency for Kurdish autonomy,
killed 37 people on Sunday in a suicide car-bomb attack in the city
centre.
Diplomatic missions have warned staff and
citizens to avoid public transport and crowded places, particularly on
and around March 21, when Kurds celebrate the Newroz New Year festival.
The day has in the past seen violent clashes between pro-Kurdish demonstrators and the security forces.
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