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At least three people, including children, were killed when a rocket believed to have been shot by Kurdish militants fell on the border town of Turkiye.

Armed clashes between Turkiye and Kurdish militants have continued since the bombings in downtown Istanbul.



Correspondent Sang-Eun Kwak in Paris reports.



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The steel structure of the building was exposed, and the windows were sharply broken.



Local time Yesterday (21st), at least three people, including children, were killed and more than 10 injured when the Turkiye border city of Karkam was attacked by rockets.



The Turkiyeh authorities, seeing it as the work of Kurdish militants, declared that they would "respond with the strongest possible means."



President Erdogan Türkiye told local media that the response would not stop at air raids and would consider deploying ground troops.



Turkiye, which has a tense relationship with the Kurdish separatist armed organization Kurdish Workers' Party and the Kurdish militia, pointed to Kurdish militants as behind the incident when a large-scale bombing occurred in a downtown Istanbul on the 13th, killing more than 80 people. and launched a retaliatory attack.



Armed strongholds of Kurdish separatists in northern Syria and northern Iraq were also included in the targets of the attack.



[Residents affected by airstrikes in Syria: Airstrikes in Turkey destroyed gas stations and killed or injured innocent people.]



In response, armed conflict in the region is intensifying again as Kurdish militants respond with retaliatory attacks, and Turkiye declares another countermeasure.