people died and 146 were injured at the border town of Reyhanli. The Turkish government blamed the Syrian regime but that seems to be a minority opinion. Earlier the same year there had been a similar attack in Cilvegözü.
Recent attacks have concentrated on the pro-Kurdish HDP, which suffered attacks on several of its regional officers earlier this year and an attack on its main election rally in Diyarbakir on the eve of the June 7 elections. Four people were killed in a double bombing which went off before the meeting. At least one of those responsible has been caught. The suspect Orhan Gonder was known to have links with Isil, but police surveillance of him was called off a day before the bombing.
The attacks on the HDP appear to be a conscious attempt to drive ordinary Kurds to break with democratic politics and resort to violence against the government. This could conceivably plunge the country as a whole into disorder. But if there is such a strategy, who is behind it?
Many Kurds are convinced that the government, despite its current declarations, is somehow linked to Isil. Ozgur Gundem, the country’s main pro-Kurdish paper, claimed that the AK party and Turkey’s intelligence service were aware of the attacks in advance.
The Kurdish movement faces potentially very serious splits over the attacks. Cemil Bayik, the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party’s (PKK) main guerrilla leader, has long wanted a return to armed struggle. On July 21, a Turkish soldier died in Adiyaman (a town about 120km north of Suruc) in a clash with the PKK. There have been other armed clashes with the PKK this week in the northeast of the country.
Selahattin Demirtas, the HDP co-leader who won an unexpected 13 percent of the votes in the general election, has appealed for calm, stressing the origins of the victims in western Turkey. He also strongly rebuked pro-AK party media for trying to link the HDP with violence, thus stoking tensions even higher.
Demirtas himself has to be personally vigilant. His party’s security officials rejected even a bouquet of flowers which arrived unexpectedly at his office.
In Istanbul, police officers’ leaves has been halved. Turkey’s future depends on the ability of its security forces to ensure that there are no further events like Suruc. On July 21, the day after the bombing, they intercepted a 100kg bomb in Tunceli province.
The test Turkey now faces is to ensure that the tragedy at Suruc remains an isolated incident and in particular that violence does not spread to its metropolitan cities.
The country has a fairly good record of fending off violence in places like Ankara and Istanbul. The probability is that the Suruc bombing shows that Isil is still largely confined to the area along the Syria border. But for the moment, no one is betting too heavily on this.
Excerpted from: ‘Suspected ISIL bombing worries Turks’. Courtesy: Aljazeera.com
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