Ten members of the Turkish security forces were killed today in two separate attacks in southeastern Turkey blamed on the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), local media reported.
Two soldiers and two village guards - locals employed to combat Kurdish militants - were killed and six others wounded in a roadside bomb attack in Mardin province, the state-run Anadolu news agency reported.
The bomb, planted by the PKK, exploded when a vehicle carrying the forces passed by, it said. The authorities have launched an operation to hunt down the "terrorists" who fled, it added.
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Another soldier was wounded in clashes that erupted at a checkpoint near a prison on the highway, according to Dogan.
The PKK, designated as a terror group by Turkey and its Western allies, has waged a bloody campaign against the Turkish state since it took up arms in 1984 for self-rule in the Kurdish majority southeast.
The Turkish army meanwhile said eight PKK members were "neutralised" on yesterday in ground and air operations in Hakkari province near the Iraqi border, Anadolu reported.
It said 320 PKK militants have been killed in Hakkari since the operations began several weeks ago but the figures could not be independently verified.
The PKK in March 2013 declared a unilateral ceasefire but this collapsed in 2015 and violence has raged ever since in a deadly conflict that so far shows no sign of ending.
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