Newsflash


Published Date: August 20, 2008

ANKARA: A suspected suicide bomber pursued by police detonated a car in southern Turkey, killing himself and wounding 12 officers, media and officials said Tuesday. "We are considering the possibility of a suicide bomber," Mersin provincial governor Huseyin Aksoy told Anatolia news agency.

Having ignored calls to stop, the driver detonated the device when chasing police opened fire on the outskirts of the Mediterranean city, according to the agency. Police estimated that the bomb contained about 30 kilogrammes (66 pounds) of C-4 plastic explosives, which separatist Kurdish rebels frequently use, unnamed officials also told Anatolia.

Security forces began following the car early Tuesday after it left the neighbouring province of Adana, where it had arrived from Diyarbakir, the largest city in Turkey's Kurdish-majority southeast. Television footage showed police spraying water on a charred metal wreckage.

Investigators suspect the assailant intended to target the police headquarters in Mersin at a time when dozens would have been leaving the building after work, Anatolia said. "The police did a very good job and foiled a big bomb attack," Mersin Mayor Macit Ozcan said.

Two of the 12 wounded policemen were hospitalised in serious condition as the security forces sought to identify the assailant. Mersin is one of the main ports on Turkey's Mediterranean coast and has a sizeable population of Kurdish immigrants from the southeast, who have staged violent demonstrations in the city in the past.

Turkish media have recently reported that Kurdish suicide bombers have sneaked into the country from camps in neighbouring northern Iraq to carry out attacks in retaliation for an intensified Turkish military crackdown against rebels. Turkish warplanes have bombed hideouts of the separatist Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) in the mountains of northern Iraq since December.

The authorities blamed the PKK-listed as a terrorist group by Turkey and much of the international community-for two bomb blasts in a crowded street in Istanbul on July 27, which killed 17 people, among them five children, and wounded more than 150. Islamist and far-left radicals have also carried out bomb attacks in Turkey in the past.

Suicide drivers detonated four trucks outside two synagogues, the British consulate and the British-based HSBC bank in Istanbul in November 2003, killing about 60 people and causing massive destruction. The attacks were blamed on a Turkish cell of the Al-Qaeda network. -AFP


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Home arrow Blog arrow US balloon mother 'admits hoax'
US balloon mother 'admits hoax' PDF Print E-mail
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Friday, 23 October 2009

The mother of a boy thought to have been swept away in a giant helium balloon has admitted the incident was a hoax, according to court documents.

Mayumi Heene apparently told officials she and her husband "knew all along" her son, aged six, was hiding at home.

The papers, which were made public in the United States, also suggest the parents had told their children to lie.

According to the affidavit, Mrs Heene said the plan was to make the Colorado family more marketable to the media.

Six-year-old Falcon's apparent disappearance prompted a major rescue operation as the silver balloon soared through the sky.

It also captivated international audiences as live television pictures followed its course.

Falcon was later found in the garage of his home.

Taste for stardom

The court document says the parents devised the hoax about two weeks earlier.

"She [Mrs Heene] and her husband had instructed their three children to lie to authorities as well as the media regarding this hoax," it continues.

Balloon over Colorado

The father, Richard Heene, continues to deny that the balloon emergency was faked.

His lawyer David Lane said he was waiting to see evidence in the case, adding: "allegations are cheap."

The BBC's Rajesh Mirchandani, in Los Angeles, says it is believed that the Heene family - who had already twice appeared in reality TV shows - constructed the elaborate ruse because they were keen on another bid at stardom.

Colorado's sheriff has said he will recommend charges including conspiracy, contributing to the delinquency of a minor and making a false report to authorities.

Some of the most serious charges each carry a maximum sentence of six years in prison and a $500,000 (£305,000) fine.



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