Five people were hurt at Istanbul airport in a brawl between knife-wielding employees of two rival coach operators, the Dogan news agency reported Sunday.
The fight broke out overnight Saturday at Sabiha Gokcen international airport involving around 40 people following mutual accusations of the firms "stealing one another's customers," said the agency.
Airport security police had to step in to separate the two sides.
At least five people who suffered minor knife wounds had to be hospitalised, officers arrested several other people and opened an investigation, Dogan reported.
Sabiha Gokcen one of two international airports serving Istanbul, Turkey's largest city in Turkey. The other is Ataturk Airport, where in June last year
45 people were killed in a triple suicide bombing blamed on Islamic extremists.
Turkey has seen its tourist sector, an economic lifeline worth some 10 percent of GDP, suffer over the past year with a string of attacks and a tense political climate following the failed coup of 13 months ago.
But with no large scale attacks since the start of this year, the authorities are hoping visitor numbers will rise to help revive the tourist industry, a key earner and employer for the economy. (AFP)