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Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu said on Thursday that the deadly Ankara attack was carried out by a YPG suicide bomber from Syria in collaboration with the PKK terrorist organization.
Speaking to reporters in Ankara, Davutoğlu said that the attack was carried out by a Syrian national named Saleh Najar, who was born in Syria's Hasakah province.
"It has been determined with certainty that this attack was carried out by members of the separatist terror organization PKK, together with a member of the YPG who infiltrated from Syria," Davutoğlu said.
He said that Turkish security forces have detained nine people in connection with the deadly attack, which killed 28 people and injured 61, while noting that 26 of the 28 people killed in Ankara attack were soldiers.
"Their connection to the YPG has been confirmed," Davutoğlu said and added that he cannot comment further as the investigation is still proceeding.
Davutoğlu underscored that there is concrete evidence about the YPG's involvement in the attack, and added that Turkey expects support in accordance with the evidence.
Davutoğlu noted that he has given instructions to the Minister of Foreign Affairs Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu to distribute documents containing information about the incident, to the members of the United Nations Security Council, known as the Permanent 5.
"It is our right to expect a common stance against terrorist organizations," he said, urging all allies to display a firm stance against the YPG.
He reaffirmed that Turkey will retaliate against the perpetrators of the attack and said that the Turkish Air Force have conducted cross-border operations in Northern Iraq, killing over 70 PKK terrorists, including senior members.
"We will take all precautions under the scope of legitimate self-defense and will retaliate with no hesitance," he said.
The prime minister also said that the same way Al-Qaida and Daesh cannot sit on peace tables, the YPG also cannot sit on the peace table and they do not have the 'right to represent the Syrian people.'
Davutoğlu warned YPG supporters and said that those directly and indirectly supporting the terrorist organization risk losing Turkey's backing.
He noted that it is unacceptable for members of NATO and the United States to have relations with an organization which carried out terrorist attacks 'in the heart of Turkey.'
He told reporters that the Assad regime, which openly expresses support for the YPG is also responsible for the attack, and said the YPG is a 'pawn' of the Assad regime.
The prime minister also touched on Russia's condemnation of the attack and said it was a 'positive thing' while he urged Russia to stop using its force against innocent civilians in Syria.
The PYD/YPG is largely accepted as the Syrian wing of the PKK, which is recognized as a terror organization by the U.S., the EU and NATO. The group recently opened an office in Moscow adorned with a poster of PKK leader Abdullah Öcalan.