A relative mourns over the coffin of Korkmaz Tedik, a board member of the Turkish Labour Party (EMEP), who was killed in twin bombings in Ankara the day before during his funeral in the capital on October 11, 2015.
Turkey woke in mourning on October 11 after at least 95 people were killed by suspected suicide bombers at a peace rally of leftist and pro-Kurdish activists in Ankara, the deadliest such attack in the country's recent history.
TOPSHOT - Turkish rescue workers stand by the wreckage of a vehicle as a Turkish police officer inspects a destroyed car and a man walks among the remains at the blast scene following a car bomb attack on a police station in the eastern Turkish city of Elazig, on August 18, 2016.
At least three people were killed and another 120 injured on August 18, 2016 in a car bomb attack on a police headquarters in eastern Turkey, a local security source said.
The 14-year-old boy's sister had last seen him running away after a small explosion at 11 p.m. Saturday, said his cousin Mesut Bozkurt. Suddenly, a larger explosion knocked the sister to the ground. She awoke in a hospital. She remembered last seeing her brother alive. "We looked for Hakki in hospitals and police station all night long,"
Bozkurt said. "At 5.30 we were called to identify his body. No injuries on his head but burns on his chest.

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