Yahoo – AFP,
Burak Akinci, October 10, 2015
Dead bodies
covered with flags lie on the ground following an explosion at the
main train
station in Turkey's capital Ankara, on October 10, 2015 (AFP
Photo/Adem Altan)
|
Ankara
(AFP) - The square in front of Ankara's central train station was to have been
the venue for a peace rally attracting people from different leftist and
Kurdish groups.
But at
10:04 am, everything changed, in a moment that will mark Turkey forever.
The area
was plunged into scenes of unimaginable horror as two suspected suicide bombers
carried out the deadliest attack in the history of modern Turkey.
Dozens of
bodies littered the asphalt, with bloodstains extending hundreds of metres.
Crying and tears were audible from every direction.
Seconds
before the twin explosions, the activists, who included several members of the
pro-Kurdish Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP) had been filmed happily joining
hands and dancing in celebration.
Then the
explosion goes off and the activists either fall to the ground or run for
cover.
The dead
lay side-by-side as they had fallen before being taken away to the morgue. Many
were swathed in the same banners they had taken to the event, including those
of the HDP.
"I saw
a man with his leg torn off lying on the ground. I also saw a torn-off hand on
the asphalt," said Sahin Bulut, 18, member of the Istanbul association of
engineers.
The power
of the blast blew out windows high up on the Ankara railway station, the main
hub of Turkey's growing rail network.
The attacks
put a knife through the heart of Ankara, which became capital following the
founding of the modern Turkish Republic by Mustafa Kemal Ataturk.
Known as a
relatively ordered place compared to the chaos that can engulf Istanbul, the
city had never known anything like violence on this scale.
"We
heard one huge blast and then one smaller explosion and then there was a great
movement and panic. Then we saw corpses around the station," said Ahmet
Onen, 52.
A man is
helped after bombs were set
off at a peace rally in Ankara on
October 10, 2015
(AFP Photo/Adem Altan)
|
'Did you
see him?'
Within two
hours of the explosions, units of police in bullet proof vests and with
automatic weapons in their hand surrounded the scene and cordoned off the area.
Police
experts in white special suits combed the area for evidence while bomb disposal
experts examined any suspect packages.
The sirens
howled as the ambulances took survivors to Ankara hospitals. Urgent appeals for
blood were made though social media.
Around the
human remains and the corpses numerous ball bearings could be seen, used in
bombs to cause the maximum damage and injury.
"There
are people who died immediately, others who were very badly wounded. It's a
true massacre," said a lawyer who came to supervise the demonstration, who
asked not to be named.
Rescuers
prepare to load a coffin into
a van at the site of twin explosions near
the
main train station in Turkey's capital
Ankara, on October 10, 2015 (AFP
Photo/
Adem Altan)
|
Among them
is a young man looking agonised who stops everyone who passes by him. "Did
you see him? Did you see him? His name is Gokhan, he was with me."
Among the
shocked survivors anger grew, accusing the security forces of not properly
assuring security at the demonstration.
"None
of the demonstrators who came were properly checked by the security
forces," said Ahmet Oren.
Such is the
anger, that a group of demonstrators targeted a police chief and the security
forces fired into the air to disperse the protesters.
"This,
I have never witnessed in my life," said one policeman.
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