Today.Az » World news » Turkish mother saves dozens of lives in suicide bombing
31 October 2011 [15:46] - Today.Az
A woman who jumped into a suicide bomber in order to protect her
children in an attack that killed two and injured 21 in Bingöl on
Saturday saved the lives of dozens of people, experts say.
The attack is believed to have been carried out by the militant
Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), which has not denied responsibility.
The attack occurred near a Justice and Development Party (AK Party)
office in the predominantly Kurdish city at 1:20 p.m. on Saturday.
Details surrounding the attack began to surface Sunday, with witnesses
stating that a woman who has been identified as Hatice Belgin threw
herself onto the female suicide bomber, who was trying to detonate
explosives strapped to her body, in order to protect her children.
Belgin had been shopping in the area with her three children. Her
sacrifice saved many lives, Development Minister Cevdet Yılmaz said.
Yılmaz visited Belgin's children -- Veysel (16), Ceylan (14) and Hazal (11) -- at Bingöl State Hospital on Sunday.
Doctors report that Veysel remains in critical condition. After being
briefed on the explosion by Governor Mustafa Hakan Güvençer, Yılmaz
announced in a statement to the press that experts are still
investigating the specifics of the attack.
"It is possible the woman who died saved the lives of many others.
Perhaps she rammed into the suicide bomber, or something else happened.
These will all be known once the investigation is complete. Currently,
we are guessing that this woman was shopping for the Eid al-Adha with
her children. It looks like she saved the lives of many others but lost
her own."
Belgin's body was returned to Bingöl after a post-mortem examination
at the Malatya Council of Forensic Medicine. She was buried at Şeyh
Ahmet Cemetery following a funeral at Fatih Mosque in Bingöl's Yeşilyurt
neighborhood. Minister Yılmaz, Governor Güvençer and Bingöl Mayor
Serdar Atalay attended the funeral. They also visited Belgin's relatives
to offer their condolences.
Yılmaz and his aides also visited the family of Mehmet Çibuk, the other person killed in the attack.
A message from the BDP
The pro-Kurdish Peace and Democracy Party (BDP) fell short of
outright condemning Sunday's attack but its co-chairpersons, Selahattin
Demirtaş and Gültan Kışanak, released a message expressing their
sympathies to the families of the victims. "We have never condoned any
acts of violence directed at ending human lives, and we never will,"
said the written statement. They also called for a through investigation
into the attack.
The PKK has been increasingly targeting civilians. It killed four
young women in September riding in a van as it drove by a police
academy. However, the PKK later issued a statement that the civilian
deaths were an accident and the bomb was intended for a police car.
In Diyarbakır on Saturday, police used water cannons to disperse
stone-throwing youths who were protesting that the bodies of 24 PKK
militants killed in a military operation more than a week ago were still
being held in a morgue in nearby Malatya province.
The Turkish military killed a total of 49 after mounting a hunt for
militants along the border with northern Iraq after 24 Turkish soldiers
were killed in simultaneous attacks on posts in Hakkari, Turkey's most
southeasterly province.
In Hakkari on Saturday, soldiers shot a mule packed with explosives
they suspect was sent towards them by militants. Their shots detonated
the explosives on the animal.
There were reports on Sunday of Turkish fighter jets taking off from a
military airbase in Diyarbakır and bombing parts of northern Iraq where
the PKK has camps.
/World Bulletin/
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