June 2016 Midyat bombing
Attack type
- v
- t
- e
Kurdish–Turkish conflict
Timeline
- First insurgency
- 1984
- Karageçit
- N Iraq (1986)
- Ortabağ
- N Iraq (1987)
- Pınarcık
- Yeşilova
- Taşdelen
- Şırnak
- Kulp
- N Iraq (1992)
- Bingöl
- Başbağlar
- Lice
- Winter campaign
- Steel
- Tokat
- Hawk
- Tunceli
- Varto
- Sazak
- Hammer
- Dawn
- Murat
- Istanbul
- Second insurgency
- Hakkâri (2007)
- N Iraq (2007)
- Ankara
- Aktütün
- Diyarbakır
- Sun
- Reşadiye
- İskenderun
- Hakkâri
- Istanbul
- 2011 border raid
- Hakkâri (2011)
- Roboski
- Hakkâri (2012)
- Beytüşşebap
- Şemdinli
- Third insurgency
- Ceylanpınar
- Siirt bombing
- Martyr Yalçın
- Arslan Kulaksız
- Şırnak
- Cizre (2015)
- Cizre (2016)
- Kandil
- Hakkari
- Silvan
- 2015 airport bombing
- Ankara (Feb 2016)
- Ankara (Mar 2016)
- Bursa
- Istanbul (Jun 2016)
- Istanbul (Oct 2016)
- Istanbul (Dec 2016)
- N Iraq (2016)
- Elazığ
- Cizre
- Euphrates Shield
- Şemdinli
- Kayseri
- İzmir
- Airstrikes in Syria & Iraq
- Olive Branch
- Siirt raid
- Sinjar (2018)
- Gercüş
- Claw
- Peace Spring
- Claw-Eagle & Claw-Tiger
- İskenderun
- Claw-Eagle 2
- Claw-Lightning & Thunderbolt
- Sinjar (2021)
- Claw-Lock
- Istanbul (2022)
- Claw-Sword
- Syria (2023 June)
- Ankara (2023)
- Syria (2023 Oct)
- Peace process and peace efforts
- 1991–2004 Kurdish–Turkish peace initiatives
- 1993 Kurdistan Workers' Party ceasefire
- 2013–2015 Solution process
- Others
On June 8, a car bomb exploded in the Kurdish town of Midyat, in the southeastern Mardin Province. It happened in close proximity to Midyat's police office, drawing parallels with the June 2016 Istanbul bombing just one day prior. Five people were killed in the blast – two police officers and three civilians – with 30 others being injured. Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim blamed the bombing on the PKK.[1][2]
Two reporters from the US state-funded Voice of America were attacked by local residents when investigating the scene.[3]
References
- ^ a b 3 killed by car bomb near police headquarters in Midyat, Turkey, CNN
- ^ Turkey blames Kurdish militants for Istanbul car bombing, Reuters
- ^ 2 VOA Reporters Attacked in Turkey, Voice of America