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At Least 30 Killed In Turkey Twin Blasts At Peace Rally

Two blasts, reportedly targeting a peace rally in Ankara, Turkey on Saturday morning, left at least 30 people dead and 126 wounded outside the capital's main train station.
Adem Altan AFP/Getty Images
Two blasts, reportedly targeting a peace rally in Ankara, Turkey on Saturday morning, left at least 30 people dead and 126 wounded outside the capital's main train station.

At least 30 people have been killed and 125 injured in two bomb explosions, reportedly targeting a peace rally in central Ankara, Turkey. The explosions occurred near the capital's train station early Saturday morning.

The BBC's Mark Lowen tells our newscast:

"The target appears to have been a peace march calling for an end to the violence with the Kurdish militant group, the PKK, which resumed over two months ago. Before the last election in June, a rally by the pro-Kurdish HDP party was bombed, blamed on Turkish nationalists. It's feared there could have been a similar motivation this time, before an electoral rerun next month."

The blasts occurred three weeks ahead of Turkey's elections, reports the Associated Press:

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The explosions occurred minutes apart near Ankara's main train station as people were gathering for the rally, organized by the country's public sector workers' trade union and other civic society groups. The rally aimed to call for an end to the renewed violence between Kurdish rebels and Turkish security forces.It was not clear if the attacks, which came weeks before Turkey's Nov. 1 elections, were suicide bombings.

No one has yet claimed responsibility for the explosions.

The AP adds:

In July, a suicide bombing blamed on the Islamic State group killed 33 people in a town near Turkey's border with Syria. A leftist militant group has also carried out suicide bombings in Turkey.

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