Snipers Kill Four Police At US Protest Over Shootings

Four police officers were killed and seven others wounded by snipers in chaotic scenes in Dallas during a protest against police shootings of black men, with a suspect warning that bombs were planted throughout the city center.

City Police Chief David Brown said two snipers shot at “police officers from elevated positions during the protest/rally.” A civilian was also wounded.

Police were continuing to exchange gunfire with a suspect holed up in a downtown garage hours after the shooting started. Four police officers were killed and seven others wounded by snipers in chaotic scenes in Dallas during a protest against police shootings of black men, with a suspect warning that bombs were planted throughout the city center.

City Police Chief David Brown said two snipers shot at “police officers from elevated positions during the protest/rally.” A civilian was also wounded.

Police were continuing to exchange gunfire with a suspect holed up in a downtown garage hours after the shooting started.

The suspect “has told our negotiators that the end is coming, and he is going to hurt and kill more of us, meaning law enforcement. And that there are bombs all over the place in this garage and in downtown,” Brown told reporters.

A woman who had been in the same part of the garage was also in custody, along with two suspects who had camouflage bags in a Mercedes and a person of interest who turned himself in after police tweeted a picture of him wearing camouflage and an assault rifle slung across his shoulder.

It is legal for those with permits to openly carry weapons in the state of Texas.

“We still don’t have a complete comfort level that we have all the suspects,” Brown warned.

Several hundred people attended the Dallas rally, which ended just before the shots rang out around 9:00 pm (0200 GMT Friday).

The protest was one of several nationwide over the fatal police shootings of black men in Minnesota and Louisiana this week that have prompted US President Barack Obama to make an emotional appeal for urgent police reform.

The Federal Aviation Administration restricted 2.5 nautical miles of airspace over the city, saying “only relief aircraft operations under direction of Dallas Police Department are authorized in the airspace.”

Mayor Mike Rawlings said both the White House and Texas Governor Greg Abbott had offered to help.

Credit: Guardian

Turkish Singer Shot In Head For Appearing On TV Talent Show Wakes From Coma

A Turkish woman who was shot in the head after ignoring threats not to appear on a TV talent show has woken from a coma. Mutlu Kaya, 19, had been warned her life was in danger if she sang on Sesi Cok Guze, a show similar to Britain’s Got Talent.

Sections of Turkish society are unhappy at the perceived liberalisation of women in the majority Muslim country.

Mutlu defied the threats and sang on the show but was later found having been gunned down at her home in the orthodox Kurdish in the Diyarbakir province.

A man entered her home and shot her in the head through a window, her father said. She had been preparing to appear on the talent show again.

Mutlu was left in a critical condition – but has incredibly now awoken after being in a coma for more than a month.

She conscious, able to communicate with family and friends and doctors are hopeful she will make a full recovery.

Kaya’s ex-boyfriend, 26-year-old Veysel Ercan, was charged with attempted murder in May.

The attack came amid fierce debate about violence against women in Turkey.

According to the non-governmental Platform to Stop Violence Against Women, 286 women were murdered in Turkey in 2014, and incredibly 134 so far in 2015.

Mutlu Kaya appearing during the show…