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DIYARBAKIR, Turkey, Aug 22 (Reuters) – Four Turkish soldiers

were killed and two wounded on Wednesday by remote-controlled

bombs targeting their convoy, security sources said, the latest

sign of escalating violence in the Kurdish region.

The deaths follows a car bombing on Monday that killed nine

people, including children, and wounded more than 60 others in

the southern town of Gaziantep.

The government blamed that attack on the outlawed Kurdistan

Workers Party (PKK), which has denied involvement.

The army sent in troop reinforcements and helicopter

gunships in response to Wednesday’s incident in the Semdinli

region of Hakkari province, which borders Iraq and Iran.

Roadside bombs are common in the southeast, scene of a

28-year conflict between the military and the PKK, listed as a

terrorist organisation by Turkey, the United States and the

European Union. More than 40,000 people, mainly Kurds, have died

in the conflict.

The PKK has stepped up attacks in recent months, and Prime

Minister Tayyip Erdogan has accused Syrian President Bashar

al-Assad of backing the rebels, underscoring fears that the

turmoil in Syria could destabilise neighbouring countries.