Protesters take to the streets of Istanbul in response to the military airstrike that killed 35 people. Msnbc.com's Dara Brown reports.
Updated at 9:45 a.m. ET
DIYARBAKIR, Turkey - Turkish warplanes launched airstrikes against suspected Kurdish militants in northern Iraq near the Turkish border overnight, the military said on Thursday, but local officials said the attack killed 35 smugglers who were mistaken for guerrillas.
The Turkish military confirmed it had launched the strikes after unmanned drones spotted suspected rebels of the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), but said there were no civilians in the area and it was investigating the incident.
The attack, which Turkey's largest pro-Kurdish party called a "crime against humanity," sparked clashes between hundreds of stone-throwing protesters and police in Diyarbakir, the largest city in Turkey's restive mainly Kurdish southeast.
Police responded by firing water cannon and tear gas at the demonstrators. Seven people were detained. One police officer was hurt after being hit by a stone, witnesses said.
Story: 'Pushed aside': Turkey's Kurds lose hope
"We have 30 corpses, all of them are burned. The state knew that these people were smuggling in the region. This kind of incident is unacceptable. They were hit from the air," said Fehmi Yaman, mayor of Uludere in Sirnak province.
The Sirnak governor's office said 35 people had been killed and one wounded during an operation near the border with Uludere district.

ENN via AFP - Getty Images
Locals gather in front of a truck carrying the bodies of people who were killed in a warplane attack in the Ortasu village of Uludere, in Turkey's Sirnak province on Thursday.
Local villagers said the smugglers were carrying drums of diesel on mules and tractors, according to the Turkish Hurriyet Daily News. The diesel drums exploded in the airstrike and burned them to death, they said.
'This is a massacre'
The pro-Kurdish Peace and Democracy Party (BDP) said party leaders were heading for the area and that it would hold demonstrations in Istanbul and elsewhere to protest the deaths.
"This is a massacre," BDP Deputy Chairwoman Gultan Kisanak told a news conference in Diyarbakir.
"This country's warplanes bombed a group of 50 of its citizens to destroy them. This is a war crime and a crime against humanity," she said.
The Turkish military said it had learned the PKK had sent many militants to the Sinat-Haftanin area, where the strikes occurred in northern Iraq, to retaliate after recent militant losses in clashes.
"It was established from unmanned aerial vehicle images that a group was within Iraq heading towards our border," it said.
"Given that the area in which the group was spotted is often used by terrorists and that it was moving towards our border at night, it was deemed necessary for our air force planes to attack and they struck the target at 21:37-22:24 (2:37-8:24 p.m. ET)," it said.
"The place where the incident occurred is the Sinat-Haftanin area in northern Iraq where there is no civilian settlement and where the main camps of the separatist terrorist group are located," it said.
The military added that an investigation was in progress, without referring to any deaths in the strikes.
The Turkish government, which has been battling the PKK since the group took up arms in 1984 to fight for an ethnic Kurdish homeland, was not immediately available for comment.
The incident threatens to spoil efforts to forge Turkish-Kurdish consensus for a planned new constitution that is expected to address the issue of Kurdish rights.
Smugglers or militants?
Smuggling is an important source of income for locals in provinces along the Iraqi border, with many villagers involved in bringing fuel, cigarettes and other goods from Iraqi villages on the other side of the border.
PKK militants also cross the border in these areas.
"There were rumors that the PKK would cross through this region. Images were recorded of a crowd crossing last night, hence an operation was carried out," a Turkish security official said.
"We could not have known whether these people were (PKK) group members or smugglers," he said.
Television images showed a line of corpses covered by blankets on a barren hillside, with a crowd of people gathered around, some with their head in their hands and crying.
Donkeys carried corpses down the hillside to be loaded into vehicles and taken to hospital.
Security sources said those killed were carrying canisters of diesel on mules and their bodies were found on the Iraqi side of the border.
They said the dead were from Uludere on the Turkish side of the border on what was a regular smuggling route.
The Firat news agency, which has close ties to the PKK, said that 17 people were still believed to be missing. It said those killed were aged around 17-20.
In northern Iraq, PKK spokesman Ahmet Deniz condemned the strike and said F-16 jets had bombed a group of around 50 people taking goods across the border and that 19 people were missing.
The PKK, regarded as a terrorist organization by Turkey, the European Union and the United States, launches attacks on Turkish forces in southeastern Turkey from hideouts inside the remote Iraqi mountains.
Turkish leaders vowed revenge in October with air and ground strikes after the PKK killed 24 Turkish soldiers in one of the deadliest attacks since the PKK took up arms in 1984 in a conflict in which more than 40,000 people have been killed.
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Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.


R.I.P:'( Turks are Barbarians! Google turk genocide and u'll understand why hitler thought he too can get away.
Ahhh... the religion of peace.
The Middle East is craking at the seams
Smugglers got killed? Not civilians living peaceful lives in their homes within the law of the land? Smugglers are criminals are they not? What were they smuggling? Cheese?
Sad to see anyone killed. What is the answer?
skilife - you need better reading skills. The Kurds were transporting needed fuels for their families to weather their winter. These people were not found to be smugglers by anyone but those who killed them and then - smuggled what - Heating fuels?
Islam killing it's own over who has the better read on the correct Muhammad. Islam is the cult of war and death and jihad on those who see life differently.
Amen...
The same Turkish government that won't even admit what happened to the Armenians back in WW1,oppress the Kurdish minorities today.They say they want to join the EU,but the EU doesn't allow its members to oppress minorities.Their actions will keep them out of the EU until they change their behavior.
Atleast the Turkish government did not bomb their own troops. Turkey should stick to what their good at and leave nation building to the professionals.
i don't get it, you cant protest death it just happens. they could protest hasty military action though. save yourselves the trouble protest whats going to happen or happening not what already happened.
What business does Turkey have in Iraq's affairs anyway. It's not like they were attacked and responded - just the opposite. These Kurds were transporting needed fuel for the winter - that's all. Just what reparations does Turkey offer these people? Just because Turkey is large and powerful in that region does not give it the right to randomly and irresponsibly attack ill-perceived threats. Just what does Turkey offer their victims?
Are there any Islamic Countries that believe in telling the truth as the facts point out rather than slanting everything they do to make themselves look innocent or at least justified?
This reminds me of a line in Naked Gun 2-1/2; I was just lucky that they were drug-dealers I backed my car over.
At a certain point people give up trying to find common ground with people whose rigid beliefs negates any possibility of peace or balance. It is then that the wars and counter attacks begin and those who engage in this death worship will reap the spoils and sorrows that these wars generate. The destruction of free will reverberate throughout the generations of future children. As long as these men who obsessively seek dominance over everything and everyone this path of oppression will continue to destroy everything and everyone in its path. The root of the problem goes deeper than religion or political differences.
another rift in differences between the turkish gov't and the Kurd people.A curse on the turk gov't.The turks and iraqis will never stop.The Kurd tribes always lose..Remember Anfal...
The Islamic Turks are going to do to the Kurds what they did to the Armenians in the early part of the 20th century; Genocide, ethnic cleansing and forced conversion. The Kurds are already Moslems, but they are being forced to abandon their culture if they want to continue living in Turkey. Shame on the UN, the EU, the Obama administration, the media and the self-appointed human rights organizations which have allowed the radical Islamic regime in power in Turkey to get away with mass murder.
I see that those despicable Turks are at it again, this time killing Kurds. Then again nobody should be surprised as the Turks have a very long history of barbarism! In fact it was the very atrocities committed by the Turks against Roman Christians in the 11th century that provoked Pope Urban II to proclaim a crusade against them in 1095 AD. Then again in 1915, they slaughtered over 1.8 Armenians and it's these same people that the right-wing thugs in Washington are in cahoots with today!!!
Friendly fire !!!