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KurdistanObserver.com
| Kurdish Group
Says It Caused Huge Istanbul Airport Fire
May 24, 2006. AP & AFP
ISTANBUL, Turkey - A quick-spreading fire
burned down most of the cargo section of Istanbul's Ataturk International
Airport on Wednesday, forcing 2,000 workers to flee the thick black smoke
that closed one runway to traffic and disrupted flights.
The inferno collapsed a large part of the
cargo building, likely causing millions of dollars in damage. Three people
were treated for smoke inhalation, authorities said. |
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"Our biggest consolation is there is no loss of
life," said Mujdat Yucel, manager of the Havas cargo and ground services
company.
Firefighting planes filled with water from the nearby Marmara Sea made more than
70 sorties to douse the flames, flying low and at an angle to avoid a nearby
Turkish Airlines building. Dozens of fire trucks also responded, and the blaze
was brought under control after more than four hours.
Authorities ruled out terrorism or sabotage and gave various possible causes for
the fire, including a spark from a welder's torch or a short-circuit.
"It was definitely not sabotage," said Deputy Gov. Fikret Kasapoglu. "But there
are various kinds of materials in there, flammable, explosive, so we have to be
careful."
A radical Kurdish group said
Wednesday it was responsible for a fire at the cargo section of Istanbul's
Ataturk airport, the hub of international air travel in Turkey, which slightly
injured three people and caused delays in air traffic.
The claim, which could not be
confirmed, was made by a group calling itself the Kurdistan Freedom Falcons (TAK)
in a message to Firat, a pro-Kurdish news agency based in Europe.
"The sabotage is a response to the policies of massacre followed by the Turkish
state towards the Kurds," the message said.
It added that its actions would continue "as long as the extermination policies
of the Turkish state against the Kurds are in force."
As authorities struggled to move parked cargo planes away from the burning
building, thousands of passengers anxiously watched thick smoke rise from behind
the large windows of the ultramodern terminal building, the main hub for
domestic and international flights and which hosts millions of tourists each
year.
The fire closed down one runway, causing delays of up to a few hours, but
authorities said there was no security risk for flights and encouraged
passengers to fly. Turkish Airlines planes could be seen landing even as the
fire raged.
The fire, which began in a section where fuel depots were located, surrounded
the building within minutes as workers fled in a panic.
"A huge black cloud came, it smelled like cables burning, the roof started
burning," cargo worker Omer Toplar said.
Toplar and hundreds of his co-workers watched from about 100 yards away and
feared that the blaze could cost them their jobs.
Workers said the entire structure was in flames within five minutes.
"There was panic, no one thought the fire would get so big," said Sebahattin
Yildiz, who said he owned cargo that was lost in the fire.
The fire destroyed much of the cargo stored in the building, including textile
products and gold shipments, officials said. They said they would need more time
to estimate the damage, but that it would be considerable.
They also said that because the cargo section contained a wide variety of
materials being exported and imported, there was still the danger for the fire
to reach explosive materials.
Radical Islamic, leftist and Kurdish militants are active in Istanbul and
Kurdish militants recently claimed responsibility for a major fire at an
Istanbul factory.
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