US CONSULATE IN TURKEY ATTACKED !
Six people have died in a gun battle outside the US consulate in the Turkish city of Istanbul.
The city's Governor, Muammer Guler, said three policemen and three attacking gunmen were killed.
No injuries were reported to staff inside the consulate. The US ambassador to Turkey condemned it as "an obvious act of terrorism" aimed at the US.
The driver of a vehicle that dropped off the gunmen at the consulate reportedly escaped.
Reports quoted police sources as saying the suspects belonged to a Turkish Sunni Islamic fundamentalist group, says David O'Byrne in Istanbul.
The Great Eastern Islamic Raiders Front is thought to have links to al-Qaeda, says our correspondent.
The consulate was moved from the centre of Istanbul to a hill on the northern outskirts of the city following the 11 September 2001 attacks in the US.
A witness to the attack, Yavuz Erkut Yuksel, said the attackers had initially emerged from a car and surprised the police officers guarding the building.
"One of them approached a policeman while hiding his gun and shot him in the head," he told CNN-Turk.
Governor Guler said: "There is no doubt this was a terrorist attack."
The US ambassador to Turkey, Ross Wilson, said: "It is enough to say they are terrorists who carried out a cowardly and dastardly attack."
Turkish President Abdullah Gul said: "Turkey will fight to the end against those who are behind them."
Turkey has seen armed attacks from a variety of groups in recent years.
The most deadly was in November 2003, when 58 people were killed by Islamist militants in suicide bombings outside two synagogues, the British consulate and a British bank in Istanbul.
The Kurdish rebels of the PKK have also been blamed for several attacks, including a car bombing that killed six people in the city of Diyarbakir in January.
The city's Governor, Muammer Guler, said three policemen and three attacking gunmen were killed.
No injuries were reported to staff inside the consulate. The US ambassador to Turkey condemned it as "an obvious act of terrorism" aimed at the US.
The driver of a vehicle that dropped off the gunmen at the consulate reportedly escaped.
Reports quoted police sources as saying the suspects belonged to a Turkish Sunni Islamic fundamentalist group, says David O'Byrne in Istanbul.
The Great Eastern Islamic Raiders Front is thought to have links to al-Qaeda, says our correspondent.
The consulate was moved from the centre of Istanbul to a hill on the northern outskirts of the city following the 11 September 2001 attacks in the US.
A witness to the attack, Yavuz Erkut Yuksel, said the attackers had initially emerged from a car and surprised the police officers guarding the building.
"One of them approached a policeman while hiding his gun and shot him in the head," he told CNN-Turk.
Governor Guler said: "There is no doubt this was a terrorist attack."
The US ambassador to Turkey, Ross Wilson, said: "It is enough to say they are terrorists who carried out a cowardly and dastardly attack."
Turkish President Abdullah Gul said: "Turkey will fight to the end against those who are behind them."
Turkey has seen armed attacks from a variety of groups in recent years.
The most deadly was in November 2003, when 58 people were killed by Islamist militants in suicide bombings outside two synagogues, the British consulate and a British bank in Istanbul.
The Kurdish rebels of the PKK have also been blamed for several attacks, including a car bombing that killed six people in the city of Diyarbakir in January.
BBC NEWS REPORT.
Labels: U.S. Embassy Turkey Islamists Militants Suicide Bombings Terrorists Instanbul al-Qaeda Gunmen
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