The gunman suspected of killing 39 people during a New Year’s attack on
an Istanbul nightclub has been caught in a police operation, Turkish
media reports on Tuesday.
Hundreds of people had gathered at the swanky Reina nightclub to
celebrate the New Year when the gunman shot a police officer and a civilian outside the
club, then stormed the premises. Most of the dead in the attack were foreign
nationals, from the Middle East.
According to Turkish
media, the suspect identified as
Abdulkadir Masharipov, an Uzbekistan national was captured in a special
operations police raid on a
house in Istanbul’s Esenyurt district, private NTV television reported,
adding that he had been staying in the house belonging to a
friend from Kyrgyzstan.
The Islamic State group has claimed responsibility for the nightclub
massacre, saying the attack in the first hours of Jan. 1 was in reprisal
for Turkish military operations in northern Syria. The man identified
as the suspect had been on the run since the attack.
The first image
of the
bruised attacker showed him in a grey,
bloodied shirt being held by his neck. Private NTV said he had resisted
arrest. His Kyrgyz friend and three women from Somalia, Senegal and
Egypt were also detained in the raid, while his 4-year-old child, who
was with him at the
home, was taken into protective custody. Hurriyet newspaper said the
alleged gunman’s wife and 1-year old daughter were caught in a police
operation on Jan. 12.
Police established his whereabouts four or five days ago, but delayed
the raid so they could monitor his movements and contacts. The suspects were being taken to Istanbul’s main police
headquarters for questioning.
Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu posted a Twitter message
thanking the interior minister, Suleyman Soylu, police and intelligence
organizations “who caught the Reina attacker in the name of the people."
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