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Turkey police blame PPK for Istanbul attacks
13 dead, 70 injured in Istanbul double bombing: TV 27/07/2008 20h54Injured women walk after two explosions in Istanbul
©AFPISTANBUL (AFP) - Two bombs exploded in Istanbul late Sunday, leaving at least 13 people dead, and some 70 others wounded, the NTV television station reported, citing the city's governor, Muammer Guler.
The first bomb created a small blast in a telephone booth in the Gungoren neighbourhood on the western European bank of the Turkish city.
A second stronger explosion took place several minutes later a few metres (yards) away while a crowd began to gather at the site of the first blast, NTV reported.
The images broadcast by NTV showed scenes of panic, with people covered in blood and disoriented as they ran from the area of the blasts, littered with debris and shattered glass.
Teams of firefighters and emergency workers were dispatched to the scene and police established a security perimeter.
Local television stations had initially reported that the blasts were caused by a gas leak.
Guler downplayed speculation that rebels of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) could be responsible for the blasts, saying it was too early to say who was to blame.
He said officials would study the images filmed by surveillance cameras near the scene of the attacks.
In the past, numerous attacks in Istanbul have been blamed on the PKK, considered a terrorist group by Turkey and Western powers, which has been fighting since 1984 for independence for the Kurdish-majority southeast region.



Injured women walk after two explosions in Istanbul
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at 14:09 on July 27th, 2008
Dear readers, a bug prevents me from adding the following text at story:
"Thirteen people have been reported dead. According to Unionradio, Turkish Police already blamed the The Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) for the attacks today. It also warned citizens over other possible attacks. These attacks add up to the indictment against 86 people belonging to the ultra nationalist terrorist organization Ergenekon network for the violent acts which took place in June 2007. Recently, a Criminal Court decided to review the indictment. Some analysts wondered over the authorship of the attacks despite the police accusations against PPK"
Related sources: Sabah, BBC, Todayszamam,
Related story: 86 seculars Turks accused of 'coup plot' (updated)