Istanbul:
Three suicide bombers opened fire then blew themselves up in Istanbul’s main
international airport on Tuesday, killing 36 people and wounding close to 150
in what Turkey’s prime minister said appeared to have been an attack by Islamic
State militants.
One attacker opened
fire in the departures hall with an automatic rifle, sending passengers diving
for cover and trying to flee, before all three blew themselves up in or around
the arrivals hall a floor below, witnesses and officials said.
The attack on Europe’s
third-busiest airport was one of the deadliest in a series of suicide bombings
in Turkey, which is part of the U.S.-led coalition against Islamic State and is
struggling to contain the spillover from neighboring Syria's civil war. It is
also battling an insurgency by Kurdish militants in its largely Kurdish
southeast.
Police fired shots to
try to stop two of the attackers just before they reached a security checkpoint
at the arrivals hall, but they detonated their explosives, a Turkish official
said.
Prime Minister Binali
Yildirim said: "This attack, targeting innocent people is a vile, planned
terrorist act.”
“There is initial
evidence that each of the three suicide bombers blew themselves up after
opening fire,” he told reporters at the airport. Yildirim said the attackers
had come to the airport by taxi and that preliminary findings pointed to
Islamic State responsibility.
Two U.S.
counterterrorism officials familiar with the early stages of investigations
said Islamic State was at the top of the list of suspects even though there was
no evidence yet.
The officials, who spoke
on condition of anonymity, said the use of suicide bombers against “soft”
targets was more typical of Islamic State than the other obvious suspect,
Kurdish PKK militants who generally attack official government targets.
One of the officials
also said that, while Islamic State had recently stepped up attacks in Turkey,
the group rarely claims responsibility because Turkey remains one of the main
corridors for its fighters traveling from Europe to Syria and Iraq.
No group had claimed
responsibility more than nine hours after the attack, which started around 9:50
p.m. local time (1850 GMT).
The attack bore similarities to a suicide
bombing by Islamic State militants at Brussels airport in March that killed 16
people. A coordinated attack also targeted a rush-hour metro train, killing a
further 16 people in the Belgian capital.
Most of those killed were Turkish nationals
but foreigners were also among the dead, a Turkish official said.
Ali Tekin, who was at the arrivals hall
waiting for a guest, said the roof came down after an “extremely loud"
explosion. “Inside the airport it is terrible, you can't recognize it, the
damage is big,” Tekin said.
A woman named Duygu, who was at passport
control after arriving from Germany, said she threw herself to the floor after
the explosion. "Everyone started running away. Everywhere was covered with
blood and body parts. I saw bullet holes on the doors," she said.
Paul Roos, 77, said he saw one of the
attackers “randomly shooting” in the departures hall from about 50 meters (55
yards) away. “He was wearing all black. His face was not masked,” said Roos, a
South African on his way home after a holiday in southern Turkey.
No comments:
Post a Comment