Two Turkish police officers have been killed by militants
from the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) in two separate attacks in
Turkey’s southeast, officials say.
A security source,
speaking on condition of anonymity, said PKK militants detonated a
roadside bomb by remote control late on Monday as a military vehicle was
traveling along a road in the Uludere district of Sirnak Province,
situated some 1,000 kilometers (621 miles) east of the capital, Ankara.
The
source added that a policeman, identified as Yahya Akan, was wounded in
the attack. He was transported to hospital, where he succumbed to his
grave injuries.
Separately, PKK terrorists attacked Camlica
Village in Adiyaman Province, critically wounding a policeman named
Yusuf Sonmez, who likewise died of his injuries later.
Turkish
military forces have been conducting ground operations as well as
airstrikes against PKK positions in Turkey’s troubled southeastern
border region as well as in Iraq’s semi-autonomous Kurdistan region over
the past few months.
The campaign began following a July 2015
bombing in the southern Turkish town of Suruc, which claimed more than
30 civilian lives. Turkish officials held the Takfiri Daesh terrorist
group responsible for the act of terror.
The PKK militants, who accuse the Ankara government of supporting
Daesh, launched a string of attacks against Turkish security forces
after the bombing, prompting the Turkish military operations in
response.
The Ankara government’s involvement in the anti-PKK
operations comes as the Turkish military is reeling from the
aftereffects of a failed coup attempt on July 15.
Turkish
authorities have dismissed hundreds of army generals and admirals as
well as low-ranking military personnel over allegations of involvement
in the botched putsch.
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