ISTANBUL (AFP) -
Turkish
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Monday his country was suffering
"one of the biggest waves of terrorism in its history", vowing to crush
the Islamic State (IS) jihadists and Kurdish rebels behind a string of
attacks.
"We will hit these terrorist organisations as hard as
possible," Erdogan said in a speech in Istanbul, two days after a
suspected IS suicide attack in Istanbul that killed four foreigners.
"Faced
with the terrorists' new strategies we will develop new modes of combat
and quickly overcome them," Erdogan said, promising democratic values
would not be sacrificed in the fight.
Of the six bombings that
have rocked Turkey in the past eight months, killing over 200 people,
four have been blamed on IS, with Kurdish rebels claiming the other two.
Turkey's
strongman leader focused his attacks on the outlawed Kurdistan Workers
Party (PKK), which resumed its three-decade-long insurgency against the
state last summer following the collapse of a shaky two-year truce.
He
also took aim at his European counterparts, whom he has repeatedly
accused of taking an indulgent approach towards PKK sympathisers.
Referring
to the tent set up outside EU buildings by pro-PKK activists in
Brussels during last week's EU-Turkey summit on migration, he demanded:
"How can the EU, which considers this (PKK) a terrorist organisation,
tolerate such a situation?
"Where's the sincerity," he demanded to know, accusing the EU of "hypocrisy".
On Sunday, Turkey summoned Belgium's ambassador to Ankara to protest over the tent.
© 2016 AFP
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