You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
Kurdish group sez it started huge fire at Istanbul Airport
2006-05-24
Flights have resumed at Istanbul's Ataturk International airport after firefighters brought under control a huge fire in the cargo area.

Three people were injured in the blaze, and an assessment of the damage could only begin once the area had cooled down, officials said.

The authorities say a short circuit may have caused the fire.

But a Kurdish separatist group said it had started it to protest against Turkish "massacres" against the Kurds.

There is no confirmation of the claim sent by the Kurdistan Freedom Falcons (Tak) to pro-Kurdish news agency Firat in the Netherlands.

Ataturk airport, about 16km (10 miles) from central Istanbul, is the main destination for domestic and international flights - and serves as a hub for tourism in Turkey.

The fire broke out at about 1230 GMT and quickly erupted into an inferno of flames and plumes of smoke.

British passenger Paul Collins said the black clouds and flames were twice the height of the building. He initially feared a plane had crashed, he added.

But when he got inside the main passenger terminal - about 1km (0.6 miles) from the cargo area - he said that it seemed to be business as usual.

"In the passenger terminal building, apart from a real feeling of apprehension around, nothing appears to have happened," he told the BBC.

"It is bizarre watching it out the window as people are going about their business.

"It is almost eclipse-like, it is so dark. There are lots of planes coming in and dumping water."

All the workers of the cargo section - up to 2,000 people - made it out safely.

Occasional explosions were heard as the fire engulfed the cargo building.

Fifty fire engines, planes and firefighters from the air force academy were all scrambled to deal with the emergency.

Yellow firefighting planes, usually used to tackle forest fires, roared low over the building every few minutes carrying water to pour on the flames.

Istanbul deputy governor Fikret Kasapoglu says no-one died in the fire and reports suggest just three people have sustained light injuries and smoke inhalation.

Three warehouse buildings have burned to the ground.

"There are various kinds of materials in there, flammable, explosive, so we have to be careful," Mr Kasapoglu said.

But he added: "It was definitely not sabotage."

In its claim, the Tak militants said: "The sabotage is a response to the policies of massacre followed by the Turkish state towards the Kurds.

Turkish authorities have not commented on the claim.
Posted by:phil_b

#1  That's the second time I got a double post after hitting submit just once. I beginning to think I have a virus. (Browser settings seem to chnage spontaneously)

Again my apologies.
Posted by: phil_b   2006-05-24 18:12  

00:00