Suicide
bomber strikes US Embassy in Ankara, two killed
1 February, 2013
The blast occurred at the entrance used by the embassy personnel and their visitors, CNNTurk reported. A security guard operating at the x-ray machine at the entrance was reportedly killed while the suicide bomber was passing through the scanner.
Police and forensic experts work on February 1, 2013 at the site of a blast outside the US Embassy in Ankara (AFP Photo / Adem Altan)
People stand outside the entrance of the US embassy in Ankara on February 1, 2013 after a blast killed two security guards and wounded several other people. It was not immediately known what caused the explosion but some media speculated it could have been a suicide bombing (AFP Photo / Turkey Out)
Rescuers take on February 1, 2013 a victim of a blast outside the US Embassy in Ankara to a waiting ambulance (AFP Photo / Adem Altan)
Rescuers take on February 1, 2013 a victim of a blast outside the US Embassy in Ankara to a waiting ambulance (AFP Photo / Adem Altan)
Police experts work on February 1, 2013 at the site of a blast outside the US Embassy in Ankara (AFP Photo / Adem Altan)
Police and forensic experts work on February 1, 2013 at the site of a blast outside the US Embassy in Ankara (AFP Photo / Adem Altan)
A
suicide bomber has attacked the US Embassy in Ankara. At least one
security guard working at the embassy was killed in the blast, as
well as the bomber, who has been identified as the member of a banned
leftist group
RT,
The blast occurred at the entrance used by the embassy personnel and their visitors, CNNTurk reported. A security guard operating at the x-ray machine at the entrance was reportedly killed while the suicide bomber was passing through the scanner.
"There
were two dead in the suicide bombing, a Turkish security guard and
the bomber himself," Ankara
governor Alaattin Yuksel told reporters, AFP reports.
The
US ambassador to Turkey, Francis Ricciardone, confirmed the death.
"We
are very sad of course, we lost one of our Turkish guards at the
gate… The compound is secure, we all feel very safe thanks to your
response,"
he told reporters.
White
House spokesman Jay Carney called the bombing "an
act of terror."
Turkish
Prime Minister Recep Erdogan told HaberTurk television on Friday that
an outlawed Marxist group was responsible for the suicide
bombing.
"It
is my principle to speak only after receiving the final result, but I
can say clearly that it is DHKP-C [Revolutionary
People’s Liberation Party-Front]," he said.
Turkish
media reports have identified the attacker as Ecevit Sanlı, 30, a
known member of the group. Sanli has reportedly spent time in prison,
though the nature of his crimes is currently unknown.
Television
footage showed a door blown and shattered tiles littering the ground
by the buildings side entrance, though no damage has been reported
within the embassy.
Witnesses
told CNN's Turkish service that a bomber was seen approaching the
building, and later entered a gate at the fortified compound. Daily
Vatan reporter Kıvanc El said in a televised interview that police
also suspected that a suicide bomber had carried out the attack,
Hurriyet Daily News reported. Body parts were also reportedly strewn
around the scene.
Police and forensic experts work on February 1, 2013 at the site of a blast outside the US Embassy in Ankara (AFP Photo / Adem Altan)
However,
one source at the nearby British Embassy who spoke with the Daily
Telegraph contradicted Turkish media reports that the blast was
caused by a suicide bomber.
"It
was not a suicide bomber or car bomb. Someone left a package or threw
a package," the
source said.
Initial
reports said the blast occurred near the gates of the visa section of
the embassy compound. Security has been tightened in the area, as
there are fears that a second bomb could be detonated. All US embassy
staffers have been taken to safe rooms inside the compound, a Daily
Star reporter told NTV.
Dozens
of ambulances and firefighters were dispatched to the scene. Two more
people have reportedly been injured in the attack.
A
female victim has been identified as former Turkish reporter, Didem
Tuncay. Tuncay, 38, was reportedly at the US Embassy to file a visa
application and suffered a head wound in the bombing, Hurriyet
reports. She remains in critical condition and is currently receiving
treatment at Ankara’s Numune Hospital.
The
embassy building is located in an area near several other embassies,
including those of Germany and France. Police have cordoned off the
area, and journalists are being kept away from the scene.
Several
armed groups, ranging from Kurdish separatists, radical leftists and
Islamist militants have carried out attacks in Turkey in recent
years.
In
2007, a member of a radical splinter group of the Kurdistan Workers’
Party carried out a suicide attack in Ankara that killed nine and
injured 121.
People stand outside the entrance of the US embassy in Ankara on February 1, 2013 after a blast killed two security guards and wounded several other people. It was not immediately known what caused the explosion but some media speculated it could have been a suicide bombing (AFP Photo / Turkey Out)
Rescuers take on February 1, 2013 a victim of a blast outside the US Embassy in Ankara to a waiting ambulance (AFP Photo / Adem Altan)
Rescuers take on February 1, 2013 a victim of a blast outside the US Embassy in Ankara to a waiting ambulance (AFP Photo / Adem Altan)
Police experts work on February 1, 2013 at the site of a blast outside the US Embassy in Ankara (AFP Photo / Adem Altan)
Police and forensic experts work on February 1, 2013 at the site of a blast outside the US Embassy in Ankara (AFP Photo / Adem Altan)
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