Rescue workers have been dispacted to the offices of a district governor after an attack. This comes as Ankara tightens measures against Kurdish politicians, arresting 10 MPs and ousting elected mayors in its southeast.
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The blast - in the Mardin district of Derik - was caused by a bomb, security sources said.
The Hurriyet news website reported that three people were wounded and the district governor, Fatih Safiturk, slightly hurt. Several ambulances have reportedly been sent to the scene of the blast.
News agency Ihlas reports that the explosion was caused by a rocket attack by Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) militants. The PKK launched an insurgency in 1984 in which over 40,000 have so far been killed.
There was no immediate confirmation on the cause of the blast.
The attack follows an attack on Wednesday and last Friday's explosion near a riot police building that killed at least 11 people, including two police officers, with two others also injured in the attack.
The PKK claimed responsibility on Wednesday for a car bomb attack in Turkey's southeast. This followed a claim by the so-called Islamic State group for the attack. Three members of Turkey‘s security forces and a civilian were killed after militants opened fire on a vehicle carrying village guards - a pro-government militia - in the eastern Turkish province of Van. The authorities blamed the attack on the PKK, broadcaster CNN Turk reported.
The PKK, which is listed as a terrorist organization by Turkey, the US and EU, resumed its decades-old armed campaign in July last year and since then over 300 civilians and nearly 800 security personnel have died, while 8,000 PKK terrorists have been killed or apprehended. A ceasefire with the PKK broke down last year.
Picking up the rubble in troubled southeast Turkey
In Diyarbakir, Turkey's Kurdish capital, government forces are ending operations against PKK-linked fighters and leaving behind a UNESCO area laden with bullet holes, rubble and police checkpoints. Diego Cupolo reports.
Image: DW/D. Cupolo
Walking on rubble
After more than three months of urban warfare, Turkish forces are pulling out of Diyarbakir, where they've been trying to eradicate militants linked to the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK). On Monday, shopkeepers were seen sweeping up broken glass and reopening stores in areas once held under curfew, but fighting continues in six districts, which remain closed to the public.
Image: DW/D. Cupolo
Damage in Sur
The area worst hit by fighting was Sur, a historic district encircled by UNESCO-listed Roman era walls (visible in the center of the photo above). With streets too narrow for armored vehicles, the old city was well-suited for guerilla warfare and provided cover for militants trying to avoid ground and air attacks. Several historic sites were damaged as a result.
Image: DW/D. Cupolo
Back to normal
Residents are slowly returning to areas where fighting took place and finding a neighborhood damaged beyond repair. Locals estimate heavy artillery rounds have hit more than half of the buildings in Sur. While the complete death count has yet to be confirmed, the Turkish government said it lost 271 soldiers in the battles.
Image: DW/D. Cupolo
Fragmented life
Much of the street fighting has ended in Sur, but gun battles occurred on Monday night and there were seven deaths on Sunday, when PKK-sympathizers were caught inside a collapsed building. As people re-enter the recently opened corridors, they are faced with police checkpoints in and around the Sur district, and tensions remain high as helicopters circle overhead.
Image: DW/D. Cupolo
Ongoing war
Despite recent skirmishes, Turkish forces are winding down operations in Diyarbakir and have pulled out completely from Cizre, Idil, Jilopi and Dargecit. At the same time, they are opening new fronts in other parts of the nation's Kurdish region. This week, new military campaigns began in Yuksekova, Nusaybin and Sirnak.
Image: DW/D. Cupolo
Ocalan's legacy
Political graffiti is as common as bullet holes in Sur. Above, a woman passes a tag referencing Abdullah Ocalan, the leader of the PKK, a group formed in the late 1970s to begin an armed struggle against the Turkish state for the expansion of Kurdish rights. At the moment, Kurds remain the largest group of stateless people in the world.
Image: DW/D. Cupolo
Collateral damage
A local teenager holds a bullet that was lodged in the front door of his family's home. Throughout the street battles, Turkish forces used battering rams to enter households in Sur and clear the district of opposition fighters. The teenager, who wanted to remain anonymous, said Turkish forces destroyed homes to punish residents for harboring 'terrorists,' regardless of their affiliations.
Image: DW/D. Cupolo
Lookouts at every corner
Two men push a cart through a lot recently cleared of sandbag trenches and rubble fallen from surrounding buildings. A man in a nearby bakery pointed out two lookouts on opposite corners of the lot. He said one worked for the government, while the other, who was sitting casually on a couch in the street, worked for the PKK.
Image: DW/D. Cupolo
Prospects of civil war
"Without a stable Turkey, there cannot be a stable Europe or United States and this conflict can become a civil war very easily," said Ramazan Tunc, an advisor for the Democratic Regions Party (DBP), a socialist Kurdish group. "Just think about where the refugees from [a war like this] will go."
Image: DW/D. Cupolo
To be rebuilt 'like Toledo'
Once operations end in Diyarbakir, Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said the architecture in Sur would be restored to rival that of Toledo, Spain. "Our struggle will continue until public order is brought to every province, every village, every field, every mountain and plain and river on this land," he told Turkish media in February.