Diyarbakir: Hundreds of people fled a conflict-hit area of southeast Turkey's largest city Diyarbakir on Wednesday, taking advantage of the lifting of a curfew to escape any further clashes between security forces and Kurdish militants.
A Reuters witness said people left the city's Sur district with suitcases, televisions and carpets on the back of pick-up trucks and handcarts, deserting an area damaged heavily in fighting since a curfew was declared there a month ago.
"It's always the ordinary people who suffer," said Mehmet Ceylan, 45, carrying a bundle on his back. "I've lived in Sur for years, and I've never witnessed a scene like this."
Hundreds of militants and security force members have been killed since July when a ceasefire collapsed, triggering the worst violence in two decades and wrecking hopes for a peace deal in a conflict that has killed more than 40,000 since 1984.
The chief district administrator's office in Sur, encircled by UNESCO-listed Roman-era walls, on Wednesday declared the lifting of a week-old curfew in Sur's western parts. However, the eastern side remained under round-the-clock curfew.
The state says the curfews, also in place elsewhere in the southeast, are imposed so police can remove barricades, explosive devices and ditches set up by the PKK, deemed a terrorist group by Turkey, the United States and European Union.
Three soldiers were wounded in clashes in Sur overnight, and one later died in hospital, a security source said.
The pro-Kurdish Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP) said it had not been able to communicate for three days with a group of people, some wounded, trapped in a basement in the southeastern town of Cizre, under curfew since mid-December.
At least six of the 31 people in the building, which has largely collapsed, have died over the past two weeks and others are seriously wounded, the HDP said on Wednesday.
The government has denied its security forces are preventing ambulances from reaching the building and has accused militants of firing on emergency workers.
Separately in Istanbul, unidentified gunmen opened fire late on Tuesday on the premises of an association, killing one man and wounding three others, the state-run Anadolu Agency said.
The association blamed the attack on "terrorists."
It followed a similar attack on Monday, when two people were killed and seven wounded in an Istanbul suburb after armed assailants fired on a teahouse.
Police detained six people in connection with the first shooting, Anadolu said.
It was not clear if the attacks were politically motivated, but they tapped into concerns that violence may spread to Istanbul, Turkey's largest city and its commercial and tourism hub.
In the western Aegean region, two leftist militants were detained on Tuesday in possession of guns and explosives, media said. Anadolu said one of them was identified as a perpetrator in the 1996 assassination of a member of the Sabanci family of leading industrialists.