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4th LD: Turkish president condemns attack in Suruc border town

Xinhua, July 20, 2015 Adjust font size:

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan condemned perpetrators of "act of terror" that killed 28 people and wounded 100 others in Suruc town near the Syrian border on Monday, private NTV news channel reported.

"We are drowning in grief that 28 citizens died and a serious number of people were injured as a result of an act of terror," Erdogan said at a press conference during his visit to the Turkish commuinty of Cyprus.

"On behalf of my people, I curse and condemn the perpetrators of this brutality," he added.

The blast hit the garden of Amara Cultural Center of Suruc district in Sanliurfa province, near the Syrian town of Kobane, also known as Ayn al-Arab.

Security forces are trying to identify the suicide bomber, Governor of Sanliurfa province Izzettin Kucuk was quoted by NTV as saying.

Officials point finger at the Islamic State (IS) for the explosion, said the report.

Deputy of pro-Kurdish People's Democracy Party (HDP) was quoted as saying that a group was making a press statement about the "rebuilding of Kobane town" when the blast occurred at the cultural center.

Meanwhile, the HDP's co-chair Selahattin Demirtas has called on his party's provincial and district headquarters to take their own security measures.

"Now, our people is in the position of taking their own security," Med Nuce TV broadcaster quoted Demirtas as saying on Monday.

At least 300 members of the Federation of Socialist Youth Associations (SGDF), mostly students, were staying at the Amara Cultural Center aiming to assist the rebuilding of Kobane, which is across the border from Suruc.

"Some 400 people across Turkey came to the district on Monday morning in order to cross into Kobane town. We think the perpetrators of the attack are from the Islamic State. It is a suicide bomb," said Ismail Kaplan, district chairman of the HDP.

Suruc is a predominately Kurdish town and is located across the border from Kobane town in Syria.

The town is home to one of the biggest refugee camps for Syrians and plays a major role in crossings of Kurdish refugees from towns in Syria to Turkey.

Kobane came under attack of Islamic State (IS) jihadists in early 2015 and thousands of people have crossed Mursitpinar border crossing and arrived in Suruc town fleeing violence.

Lately, Turkish security forces have arrested dozens of IS militants across Turkey.

Ankara has long been under international criticism for not making its best to stem the flow of jihadists into Syria, but the Turkish authorities have recently stepped up security measures on its volatile 911-kilometer (566-mile) border with the war-torn country. Endit