Turkey knew about Suruç bombing plot but turned blind eye
As Turkey marked on Monday the fifth anniversary of
the Suruç suicide bombing that left 33 people dead and 100 wounded, questions
remain over the days leading up to the deadly attack and the events that
followed.
The Justice for Suruç Platform, a group of lawyers
and legal institutions involved in the case, shared the findings of a new
report at a press conference in Ankara on Saturday that accuses government
officials of having prior knowledge of the plot but turning a blind eye.
The report pointed to intelligence sent to
authorities in Suruç before the attack that warned of a suicide bombing
attempt.
On July 20, 2015, the Islamic State (ISIS) militant
group bombed a group of youth activists, the Federation of Socialist Youth
Associations (SGDF), in the southern Turkish province of Şanlıurfa, bordering Syria.
The activists had gathered at the Amara Cultural
Centre to discuss the reconstruction of the neighbouring Syrian Kurdish town of
Kobane, the site of an ISIS siege that made international headlines in 2014.
The suicide bomber, Abdurrahman Alagöz, was later
discovered to be a wanted terror suspect, along with his brother Yunus Emre,
the perpetrator of the deadly Ankara bombing that killed 109 people a few
months later in October 2015, the report said.
Despite authorities’ efforts to search people in the
vicinity, Alagöz managed to roam freely in Suruç on the day of the attack,
according to the report, which cited CCTV footage as evidence.
After the attack, police forces prevented ambulances
from arriving on the scene of the incident and used pepper spray on wounded
people, the report said.
The report cited an 18-month confidentiality order
on the investigation’s findings, as well as other indications of neglect and
deficiencies in the investigation, have left a cloud of uncertainty hovering
over the ISIS attack.
Requests by Justice for Suruç Platform to expand the
scope of the investigation, open it to public control and include victims in
the process have all been denied, and an application submitted to Turkey’s
Constitutional Court regarding alleged violations in the case was rejected.
The report said that the Ankara bombing could have
been prevented if the request Justice for Suruç Platform submitted for the
expansion of the case “had even been examined”.
Some findings of the Suruç bombing investigation only
became public in documents relating to the subsequent Ankara bombing, the
report said.
The only suspect currently being tried in the Suruç
case is Yakub Şahin, while two other suspects – İlhami
Bali and Deniz Büyükçelebi – remain at large.
Şahin was due to appear in court for
the first time earlier last week, but failed to show up.
The report also accused Turkish civil servants of
destroying valuable evidence, and protested that no legal against was taken
against them for the act.
Five hours had been cut from the video footage of
the day of the Suruç attack – footage that was only brought in as evidence for
the investigation three-and-a-half years later, the report said.
“It is evident that footage following the massacre
was intentionally not included in the case file,” the report statement, as it
shows “how the transfer of the wounded to hospitals was prevented by
law-enforcement authorities, pepper spray was used on the crowds and perhaps
more”.
Furthermore, the court has turned “a blind eye to crimes
committed by civil servants by not filing a criminal complaint (against them)”,
it said.
“It is very evident that the state overlooked a
massacre by not taking precautions in Suruç,’’ the report said. “There is not
just an oversight, but ill intent and this is not a claim, as it is a truth
that has been substantiated by documents.”




