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Turkey bombings kill 29 after soccer match

The twin Saturday night bombings in Istanbul inflicted high casualties among police, killing 27 officers, as well as two civilians.TOLGA BOZOGLU/European Pressphoto Agency

ISTANBUL — Turkey’s Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu said two blasts after an Istanbul soccer match killed 29 people and wounded 166 others. Officials said one of the attacks was a car bomb outside a stadium that targeted police officers on duty for the game.

The twin Saturday night bombings inflicted high casualties among police, killing 27 officers, as well as two civilians.

In an address early Sunday, the minister said 10 people had been arrested in connection with the attacks.

Soylu, speaking from Ankara in comments carried by local media, said the second explosion appeared to be in a nearby park and might have been a suicide bomb.

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The explosions set off activity around central Istanbul, with rushing ambulances, helicopters hovering, and a large plume of smoke rising over the city, scenes that were as familiar as they were frantic. Like last summer’s attempted coup and a devastating attack at Ataturk Airport in Istanbul, the bombs Saturday came in the late evening, when this megacity’s streets, bars, and restaurants were packed.

Once the news ricocheted around town, revelers hurried home, glued to their mobile phones amid the sound of sirens. Those closer to the stadium heard screams and the sounds of gunfire.

“I heard a large explosion and immediately turned around and then there was a second explosion,” said Sheri Cavazos, an Istanbul resident who was at a nearby hotel. “I immediately thought it was a terrorist attack. I wasn’t surprised. I was expecting it.”

Images shared on social media showed fires, several cars destroyed, and police hats scattered on the ground.

But within a couple of hours, it seemed clear that a much more serious attack against civilians had not transpired. The bombings occurred after the game was over, and most fans had left the area around the stadium. Local media reported that the attack targeted a riot police bus, not a gathering of civilians.

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Turkey faces numerous security threats, including the Islamic State, which Turkey is fighting in Syria and Iraq as part of a US-led coalition against the terrorist group, and Kurdish militants who are at war with the Turkish state in the southeast. No group immediately took credit for the attack, although the choice of target — the police, not civilians — was in line with the types of attacks that have been carried out by Kurdish militants.

Over the past four years, Turkey has evolved from a country of stability and prosperity that was trying to lead the Middle East at a time of great turmoil to one that is increasingly consumed by violence and political problems within its own borders.

Istanbul, a city of 14 million residents that has thrummed with tourists in recent years, has become a frequent target, with attacks over the last year in the old city and on Istiklal Avenue, the most famous street. Tourism has collapsed, businesses have fled the city center to go to the suburbs, and many trendy restaurants and shops have closed.

“This is the new norm now,” said Ozan Tas, a taxi driver who was working near the stadium.


Material from the Associated Press was used in this report.