A car bomb detonated last night outside the home stadium of football giants Besiktas after a Super Lig match against Bursaspor, and less than a minute later a suicide attacker blew himself up near a group of police at a nearby park.
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who postponed foreign travel, declared Turkey would "fight terrorism to the end".
He and Prime Minister Binali Yildirim attended the funeral of five of the 30 police officers killed, while flags were ordered flown at half mast.
"Sooner or later we will have our revenge", Interior Minister Suleman Soylu told the mourners. "The arm of the law is long".
People also gathered outside the Besiktas stadium to lay flowers, many holding Turkish flags and shouting "Down with the PKK!" and "Our homeland is indivisible!"
Soylu said 30 police, seven civilians and an unidentified person had died in the blasts and 155 were wounded. Thirteen people have been detained over the blasts.
Deputy Prime Minister Numan Kurtulmus, speaking on CNN Turk television, said the attack had targeted the police.
"Experts say at least 300-400 kilogrammes of explosives had been used. There was a pit where the car detonated," he said.
A forensic team today inspected the stadium and the park to collect evidence, an AFP journalist said, while municipal workers cleaned up the area.
State broadcaster TRT late yesterday showed images of the wreckage of a car engulfed in flames with emergency services swarming around the scene outside the sports venue.
"I heard two explosions in less than one minute, followed by the sound of gunshots," one witness told AFP on condition of anonymity.
Besiktas is one of Istanbul's most popular football clubs, and its fans are known for their anti-establishment views and famously played a big role in the 2013 protests against Erdogan, who was then prime minister.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack.
In an earlier statement, Erdogan said that "the name or the method of the terrorist organisation that perpetrated the vile attack" did not matter.
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