2005 Kuşadası minibus bombing explained
Kuşadası bus bombing |
Location: | Kuşadası, Turkey |
Target: | Civilian passenger/tourist minibus |
Date: | 16 July 2005 |
Type: | Bombing |
Fatalities: | 5 |
Injuries: | 14 |
Kuşadası minibus bombing occurred on July 16, 2005, when a minibus carrying locals and tourists to the town's famous "Ladies Beach" exploded in Kuşadası, Turkey. Five people, four women and one man, were killed in the blast.[1]
The Kurdish group PKK was initially suspected of carrying out the bombing but they denied being involved in the attack.[2] A suspect was arrested in Istanbul on 8 April 2006.
Victims
Casualties included three Turkish nationals: Deniz Tutum (21), a native of Kuşadası on her way to work, Eda Okyay and Ufuk Yücedeniz, both 23 and fiancées on a weekend excursion from İzmir, and two tourists: Helyn Bennett (21), of County Durham, England[3] and Tara Whelan (17), of Waterford, Ireland.[4] [5] A total of fourteen people were injured, eight Turks and six British tourists. Seven people, including all but one of the British citizens, had their conditions judged serious enough to be transported to Ege University hospital in İzmir.[6]
Deniz Tutum's funeral in Kuşadası was transformed into a mass gathering of which moving accounts were made.[7] [8] Tara Whelan's funeral in her hometown as well as the aftermath for all concerned was covered with emphasis by the national media in Ireland.[9] [10] A commemoration service was held for Helyn Bennett, along with other British bombing victims of 2005, in Southwark Cathedral.[11]
The cases of Helyn Bennett and of members of her family, several of whom were wounded in the same attack, were cited as examples during the process that led to the establishment in the United Kingdom in 2007 of a statutory fund through the Red Cross for overseas victims of terrorism;[12] a previously existing scheme managed by the Criminal Injuries Compensation Authority making criminal injuries payments for UK attacks only.
See also
Notes and References
- The blast came six days after a bombing in the nearby town of Çeşme, which had left at least 20 people injured. Two months earlier, on 30 April, a police officer of Kuşadası, chief superintendent Yaşar Aykaç, had lost his life while he was trying to defuse, unprotected, a bomb placed in a plastic bag in the town square. Web site: Turkish resort blast kills five. BBC News. BBC News. 2006-07-16.
- Web site: Kurds 'deny' Turkey resort bomb. BBC News. BBC News. 2006-07-16.
- Web site: Tourist terror victims 'deserted'. BBC News. BBC News. 2006-03-13.
- Web site: Tributes for Turkish blast victims. CNN.com. CNN. 2005-07-18.
- The Tara Whelan who died at Kuşadası should not be confused with the British Telecom engineer of the same name, who died in a telegraph pole accident in Bristol in May 2001 and who made the headlines during the ensuing prosecution brought against her employer by the CWU and the verdict pronounced in 2006. Web site: BT Cleared Over Death of Engineer Tara Whelan . CWU - Central Counties & Thames Valley . . 2006-11-13 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110725213833/http://www.cwu-cctv.org/article.php?articleid=145 . 2011-07-25 . dead . 2009-04-05 .
- Web site: Terörün çirkin yüzü (The ugly face of terror). Yeni Asır, İzmir. 2005-07-18. tr. 2008-08-17. 2009-10-19. https://web.archive.org/web/20091019135641/http://ya2005.yeniasir.com.tr/07/17/index.php3?kat=ana&sayfa=ilks2&bolum=gunluk. dead.
- Web site: Kist van Deniz gaat van hand tot hand. volkskrant.nl . de Volkskrant. 2005-07-19. nl.
- Web site: Why Turkey should not enter northern Iraq seeking PKK. ekathimerini.com. Aimée Kiene. Kathimerini. 2005-07-19.
- Web site: Funeral of bomb victim in County Waterford. RTÉ. 2005-07-21.
- Web site: Life is empty for Whelan family without Tara. Waterford News and Star. 2006-07-12. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20110622090247/http://archives.tcm.ie/waterfordnews/2006/07/12/story22490.asp. 2011-06-22.
- Web site: Commemoration for bombing victims. BBC News. BBC News. 2006-09-07.
- Web site: Fund for overseas terror victims. BBC News. BBC News. 2007-05-17.