TAK has claimed responsibility for a number of attacks against police officers, soldiers, government and business institutions since 2004. Its earliest attacks were small, non-lethal bombings in public places which the group described as "warning actions." These warnings, however, had become deadly by the summer of 2005. TAK also issued a statement warning tourists that while they are not direct targets, tourist attractions and cities which generate revenue for the Turkish state as considered valid targets. • 20 people were injured when a bomb exploded at
Çeşme, a coastal resort town on July 10, 2005. • Less than one week later, five people were killed and more than a dozen wounded when a
bus was blown up in the seaside town of Kuşadası. This type of attack against a tourist target is perhaps the signature tactic of TAK. The group has targeted civilians to discourage
tourism in Turkey by attacking targets such as hotels and ATMs. TAK claims to have no desire to kill foreigners, only that it wishes to cut off a key source of revenue for the Turkish government. • In 2006 the group's attacks continued, including a failed plot to attack a bus carrying legal officials on April 12, 2006. Five of the group's members were arrested when the plot was broken up. • The group also claimed responsibility for an April 5, 2006 attack on a district office of the Justice and Development Party in Istanbul. • In March, one person was killed and thirteen injured when TAK detonated a bomb near a bus station in Istanbul. The group's website states the rash of attacks are revenge for the imprisonment of
Abdullah Ocalan, the figurehead for the armed Kurdish nationalist movement. • On August 30, 2006, the town of
Mersin was attacked via a bomb planted in a rubbish container on Inonu street, one person was injured. The bombing is believed to be linked to the recent attacks by TAK, however they have not claimed responsibility. • In the
July 2008 bombings, the deadliest attack against civilians in Turkey since
2003, two bombs hit a shopping mile in
Güngören district of Istanbul. • In June 2010, they blew up a military bus in Istanbul, killing four people including 3 soldiers and a 17-year-old girl. This was received by observers as a "resumption of guerrilla warfare" which "brings to a final end an unofficial truce between the PKK and the government, which last year launched an initiative giving Kurds greater civil rights." The bombing is believed to be linked to TAK, however they have not claimed responsibility. • September 20, 2011 3 people died and 34 people were injured in
a bomb attack in
Ankara. Kurdistan Freedom Hawks claimed the attack. • On December 23, 2015 Istanbul's
Sabiha Gökçen International Airport was
hit by mortar fire from the Kurdistan Freedom Hawks. • On February 17, 2016, the Kurdistan Freedom Hawks
attacked military buses in
Ankara killing 28 Turkish military personnel and 1 civilian. The group claimed responsibility two days later, on 19 of February. • On March 13, 2016, a
car bombing in the
Kizilay district of Ankara killed 37 and injured more than 120 others. TAK claimed responsibility for the attack on March 17. • On April 27, 2016, a suicide bomber blew herself up in the northwestern city of
Bursa leaving thirteen people wounded. TAK claimed responsibility for the
Bursa attack on May 1, 2016. • On June 7, 2016, a
bomb targeting a police bus in Istanbul detonated, killing seven police officers and four civilians. TAK claimed responsibility for the bomb, warning tourists that Turkey wouldn't be a safe destination any longer. • On October 6, 2016, Kurdistan Freedom Hawks (TAK) claimed responsibility a bomb attack was carried out in İstanbul's Yenibosna district outside of police station on October 6, causing 10 civilians to get wounded. • On November 24, 2016, TAK claimed responsibility for a car bomb attack that killed two people and wounded 30 more in the Turkish city of Adana, according to a statement on its website. • On December 10, 2016, a
car bombing and a suicide bomber in the
Beşiktaş district of
Istanbul killed 46 people, of which 37 were police officers, and injured at least 160 others. TAK claimed responsibility for the attack the day after. • On January 5, 2017 TAK claimed responsibility for a car bombing at a court house in
İzmir which killed a police officer and a courthouse employee, as well as injuring 9 others. This erupted into a shootout between police and the suspected perpetrators where 2 TAK members died and 1 fled. • On November 10, 2017 The female TAK Fighter Çiçek Karabulut was killed with a hand grenade after a gunfight in
Mardin, Mardin Province. The organization claimed this incident in a statement published on January 17, 2018. ==References==