Terror Attacks

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Terror Attacks Page 36

by Ann Williams


  A family who were having a meal in a nearby café ran out onto the street when they heard the explosion. They were shocked by the scene of the tangled bus and bodies lying everywhere and, fearing that there would be a further blast, they ran away from the scene.

  At the same time there were two other blasts after explosive devices were placed in rubbish bins on the main boulevard in Marmaris. Although it is a popular tourist area lined with bars, clubs, cafés and restaurants, there were no serious injuries connected with these blasts.

  Six people were injured in a suburb of Istanbul when a bomb exploded in the garden of a school. Witnesses said the blast caused panic, with people covered in blood running away from the scene, and glass and debris flying through the air.

  NOT HELPING THEIR CAUSE

  The Kurdistan Freedom Falcons made it obvious that although they were targeting Turkey’s tourist industry, the real reason was to further its separatist cause for the country’s sizeable Kurdish minority. The explosions coincided with the installation of Turkey’s new military chief of staff, Yasar Büyükanit, who had announced an unyielding fight against the terror attacks of the Kurdish extremists. The PKK, who ended a cease-fire in 2004, has used violent means to fight for their political rights for more than 20 years. More than 30,000 people lost their lives during a guerrilla war which took place in Turkey between the years of 1984 to 1999.

  The Kurds do have reason to be bitter, due to their history with the three states of Iran, Iraq and Turkey. Over the years Iraqi Kurds have been brutally massacred by Saddam Hussein. However, the Kurds are not helping their cause especially at a time when Turkey is endeavouring to join the EU. By targeting civilians, the so-called ‘Freedom Falcons’ are only making things worse for the people they claim to represent. Ordinary Turks, who are enraged at the latest spate of violence, are now calling for firm action to crush the Kurdish rebels once and for all.

  To take action, however, would only bring about further bloodshed. It would do nothing to bring about a lasting settlement and would only do more serious damage to the Kurdish cause.

  Copyright

  ISBN

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, without the prior permission in writing of the publisher, nor be otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.

  Produced by Omnipress Ltd, United Kingdom

  The views expressed in this publication are those of the author. The information and the interpretation of that information are presented in good faith. Readers are advised that where ethical issues are involved, and often highly controversial ethical issues at that, they have a personal responsibility for making their own assessments and their own ethical judgements.

  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Contents

  Introduction

  The Origins of Terrorism

  PART ONE: EARLY TERRORISM

  Jing Ke, The Master Assassin

  The Assassination of Pompey

  The Assassination of Julius Caesar

  The Zealots

  Ali ibn Abi Talib

  The Assassin Movement

  PART TWO: 1600–1899

  The Gunpowder Plot

  The Boston Tea Party

  John Brown’s Fight Against Slavery

  Pogroms in Odessa

  Assassination of Tsar Alexander II

  Haymarket Square Riot

  PART THREE: 1900–1969

  The Los Angeles Times Bombing

  Assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand

  Wall Street Bombing

  The Hebron Massacre

  The Bombing of King David Hotel

  The Qibya Massacre

  Bombing of 16th Street Baptist Church

  The Black Panthers

  El Salvador Death Squads

  PART FOUR: 1970–1989

  Avivim School Bus Massacre

  Black September

  Lod Airport Massacre

  Bloody Friday

  Munich Massacre

  Diplomatic Assassinations in Khartoum

  Dublin-Monaghan Bombs

  Guildford and Woolwich Pub Bombings

  The Laju Incident

  IRA Coach Bomb

  Cambodia Genocide

  The OPEC Hostages

  Assassination of Aldo Moro

  Airey Neave bombing

  Iranian Embassy Siege

  The Bologna Massacre

  Hyde Park and Regent’s Park Bombings

  Rangoon Bombing

  The Sabra and Shatila Massacre

  Gulf Air Flight 771

  Harrods Bomb Blast

  The Brighton Bomb

  TWA Flight 847

  Air India Flight 182

  Egypt Air Flight 648

  Enniskillen Massacre

  Pan Am Flight 103

  Attack on The Royal Marine School of Music

  PART FIVE: 1990–2006

  The Murder of Ian Gow

  World Trade Center Bombing

  Warrington Bomb Attacks

  Alas Chiricanas Flight 00901

  Genocide in Rwanda

  Kizlyar Hospital Siege

  Docklands Devastation

  Acteal Massacre

  September 11

  Moscow Theatre Hostage Crisis

  The Bali Bombing

  Gulf War Number Three

  Chechnya ‘Black Widows’

  Beslan School Hostage Crisis

  Madrid Bombings

  The July 2005 London Bombings

  Bombs Rock Egypt

  Mumbai Massacre

  Israel–Lebanon Terror

  Britain on ‘Red Alert’

  Rebel Attack in Turkey

  Copyright

 

 

 


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