Chaos in Istanbul as blast hits metro

Chaos in Istanbul as blast hits metro
A pipe bomb left near an Istanbul station exploded late on Tuesday, wounding five and causing panic in a city on edge following a spate of bombings across Turkey.
3 min read
01 December, 2015
The metro system in Istanbul was brought entirely to a halt after the blast [Getty]

A station on the Istanbul metro was rocked by a blast suspected to have been caused by a home-made bomb, causing panic in Tuesday's evening rush hour and wounding at least half a dozen people.

There was no word from federal officials over the cause of the blast, but the local mayor and Turkish news reports said that it had likely been caused by a bomb.

The huge blast hit an overpass close to the metro station in the Bayrampasa district of Istanbul.

"Five of our citizens were injured when a pipe bomb left on barriers on the overpass exploded," Atilla Aydiner, the district mayor, told A Haber television.

Security sources were also quoted by the Dogan news agency as saying the blast appeared to have been caused by a home-made bomb.

The metro system in Turkey's largest city was brought entirely to a halt after the blast, the municipality said, although reports said that normal service was now being restored.

Other reports had said the cause of the blast could have been linked to an electrical transformer and that six people had been injured.

Video footage on Dogan showed large sparks shooting out like fireworks from the overpass, lighting up the sky near the height of evening rush hour.

Dogan also said a truck on the overpass was damaged by the explosion with holes on its windshield, while other pictures showed a public bus with blown-out windows.

Large numbers of ambulances were despatched to the scene, as commuters were helped to safety, reports said.

'Investigating all possibilities'

   
Turkey is currently on alert for attacks [Getty]


"The cause of the explosion is not clear. We are investigating all possibilities," Istanbul governor Vasip Sahin was quoted as saying by the state-run Anatolia news agency.

He gave a lower toll of just one person injured.

Turkey is currently on alert for attacks after 103 people were killed on 10 October when two suicide bombers' explosives ripped through a crowd of peace activists in the capital Ankara, the worst attack in modern Turkey's history.

Turkey has in recent weeks detained several suspected members of the Islamic State group, with officials saying they were planning attacks in the city.

The Paris attacks on 13 November that left 130 people dead and were claimed by the Islamic State group also raised fears over Istanbul's potential exposure to a similar assault.

But Turkey is also waging an all-out assault on the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), which has staged dozens of deadly attacks against members of the security forces - but largely in the southeast of the country.

Meanwhile, the banned ultra-left wing group the Revolutionary People's Liberation Party–Front (DHKP-C) has also staged a string of usually small-scale attacks in Istanbul over the past few months.

There have been repeated security alerts on Istanbul's expanding metro system in recent months, but until now all had proved to be false alarm.