Rioting explodes in Turkish region
Turkish police fired into the air to disperse a protest march in mainly Kurdish southeast Turkey on Apr. 3, killing one person.
Security sources said additional troops were being deployed to Kiziltepe on Apr. 2, a town of about 100,000 people south of the region's main city of Diyarbakir.
In Ankara, Parliament called a special session for Apr. 4 to discuss the violence.
The southeast has seen the most intense rioting in many years after the Mar. 28 funeral of 14 armed separatists killed in clashes with the army. Tensions reflect discontent over local conditions and resurgence of a Kurdish guerrilla campaign.
Police said Mehmet Sidik Onder, 22, received a bullet wound to the stomach after police fired in the air to stop a march in Kiziltepe, near the Syrian border. The protesters were heading for the home of another man shot dead in the town on Apr. 1.
Witnesses said the police fired at the man, the ninth to die in a wave of unrest that could stir serious strains in Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan's ruling Justice and Development Party, and stoke tensions with the influential military.
Events are watched closely by the European Union that Turkey seeks to join.
A Molotov cocktail attack set a bus on fire in Istanbul on Apr. 2, resulting in three deaths, the CNN Turk news channel reported.
A group of protesters hurled a Molotov cocktail onto a bus in Istanbul's Bagcilar suburb and an elderly woman who got off in panic from the burning vehicle was hit by a car in the street, dying in hospital, the channel said.
Two more bodies were recovered after police removed the wreckage of the bus, which crashed into a truck while maneuvering to escape the hit, it said. Another woman passenger was seriously injured.
Youths have been fighting street battles for days with police in the region's main city, Diyarbakir. On Apr. 1, there were clashes in Silopi, near the Iraqi border.
Locals gathered under a canopy in Kiziltepe to express condolences to relatives of the two men killed in the town.
Abdulkadir, a car salesman, said: "The people are very angry and I think the trouble will continue. We are protesting because we want Europe to know what is happening. How can Turkey enter the EU when it is like this?"
Erdogan has promised firm action to thwart those he says seek to divide Turkey.
State-run Anatolian news agency said a total of 565 protesters were detained and 247 of them formally arrested on Apr. 2, bringing to 445 the total number of arrests in two days.
Political analysts and diplomats say the violence reflects local anger over high unemployment, poverty and Ankara's reluctance to grant more autonomy to the mainly Kurdish region.
Locals are disappointed more reforms have not emerged out of Turkey securing an EU go-ahead last October to begin accession talks, and pledges of economic improvements by Erdogan.
Ankara has lifted restrictions on the Kurdish language and culture in recent years, hoping to further its bid to join the EU, but critics say it needs to do much more.