Police were on
high alert across Turkey on Sunday after the previous day's attack by a
suicide bomber in Istanbul's most popular shopping district, killing
three Israelis and an Iranian, with dozens more people wounded in the
blast. Israeli President
Benjamin Netanyahu told reporters on Saturday that Israel was trying to
determine whether the attack had been aimed at Israelis and was checking
if Islamic State was responsible. "There
is information that it is an attack carried out by an ISIS member," he
told reporters on Saturday. "But this is preliminary information; we are
still checking it." Israel has
confirmed that three of its citizens had died in the blast. Two of them
held dual citizenship with the United States. An Iranian was also
killed, Turkish officials said. The
attack on Istiklal Street, Istanbul's most popular shopping district,
appeared similar to a January suicide bombing in another tourist area of
Istanbul. In that attack, blamed by the government on Islamic State, a
pedestrian suicide bomber blew himself up among a group of German
tourists near the city's historic center. No
one has claimed responsibility for Saturday's bombing. Turkish
officials said it could have been carried out by Islamic State or by the
outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), which is carrying out a violent
struggle for autonomy in the mainly Kurdish southeast. A
2-1/2-year PKK ceasefire collapsed last July, triggering the worst
violence in the southeast since the 1990s. Turkey has already been on
high alert because of security fears about violence during a spring
festival this weekend. The United States
and some European embassies had warned their citizens to be vigilant
ahead of the Newroz celebrations, which are mostly celebrated by Kurds.
The festival often brought clashes between Kurdish protesters and
security forces during the height of the PKK insurgency in the 1990s. A
statement from the PKK sent greetings to its people, who it said had
not conceded on freedom during the winter and called on young Kurds to
join its movement. EERILY QUIET Streets
across Istanbul -- usually bustling with traffic and pedestrians on
Sundays -- were eerily quiet apart from the sound of police helicopters
buzzing overhead. Television footage showed Istiklal Street virtually
empty. A small group of lawmakers
from the Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP), the Kurdish-rooted opposition
party, were scheduled to walk to Istanbul's Bakirkoy district for Newroz
celebrations. The roads in that area were being closed by police for
security reasons, Anadolu Agency reported. Social media sites
such as Twitter and Facebook were not readily accessible, local users
reported. Authorities have blocked access to such sites after bombings
in the past, usually because graphic images have been shared online. Saturday's
suicide bombing was the fourth such attack in Turkey this year,
bringing the death toll to more than 80. Responsibility for the past two
attacks, both suicide car bombings in the capital Ankara, was claimed
by a PKK offshoot. In its armed
campaign in Turkey, the PKK has historically struck directly at the
security forces but recent bombings suggest it could be shifting
tactics.
Turkish police on high alert in deserted streets after bombing

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