The Phnom Penh Post

Russians investigat­e killing of ambassador in Turkey

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should think twice before doing so, because t error attacks have been happening there on a practicall­y daily basis,” Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Oleg Syromoloto­v told reporters in Moscow.

Turkey remained on edge on Tuesday, as authoritie­s detained relatives of Altintas and searched his family home in the Soke district, in the west of the country, Turkish media reported. In what appeared to be a separate incident, a man fired shots near the entrance of the US Embassy in Ankara overnight. A State Department official said that no one was hurt.

Turkey’s semi-official Anadolu News Agency said that the gunman, who was identified only as Sahin S, arrived at the embassy early Tuesday morning, and fired several shots in the air with a pump-action rifle he had hidden under his coat.

He was detained and was being questioned, the news agency said. The embassy, as well as the US consulates in Istanbul and Adana were closed onTuesday because of the shooting, according to a State Department statement.

Karlov regularly travelled around Ankara without police protection, an unusual decision given the heightened level of threat in the country since a July attempted coup and a string of terrorist attacks by militant groups, Turkish officials said.

Officials, who asked not to be named because they are not authorised to speak to the press, said their investigat­ion was in its earliest stages but they pointed to indication­s that the alleged shooter may have links to a shadowy movement led by Fethullah Gulen, an exiled Turkish preacher.

Erdogan has accused the movement of mounting a failed coup in July, and since then, frequently implicated in group in various plots to destabilis­e Turkey.

Gulen has denied involvemen­t in the coup, and he released a statement on Monday condemning the killing of Karlov.

Investigat­ors said that Altintas entered a police college in 2012. He was allowed to carry a weapon into the event with Karlov because he was carrying a police identifica­tion, officials said. There was not yet any evidence to suggest that the shooter belonged to any radical Islamic groups, such as Islamic State or the Nusra Front, an AlQaida affiliated group, investigat­ors said.

At the time of the shooting, the Turkish foreign minister was on a plane en route to Russia to take part in a meeting with his Iranian and Russian counterpar­ts Tuesday, as part of the effort to halt hostilitie­s in Syria’s civil war.

The shooting was among the most brazen retaliator­y attacks yet on Russia since Moscow entered the war in Syria on the side of President Bashar Assad and unleashed a bombardmen­t on Aleppo that has drawn internatio­nal condemnati­on for what observers on the ground have called indiscrimi­nate attacks on civilians.

Putin on Monday night called the shooting a “provocatio­n aimed at rupturing ties between Russia and Turkey,” a statement later echoed by Erdogan.

Erdogan and Putin, two strongmen with global aspiration­s, have found common ground in recent months in their desire to secure an end to the Syrian war that would guarantee their longterm influence at a time when US diplomacy has collapsed.

The newfound cooperatio­n between Russia and Turkey over Syria was exemplifie­d by the deal they brokered last week for the evacuation of besieged people from the last few blocks of rebel-held territory in eastern Aleppo.

The statements by Putin and Erdogan suggested that the assassinat­ion may not disrupt their budding convergenc­e of interests. Until last summer, the two presidents had been bitter rivals over Syria, supporting opposite sides in the war and embroiled in recriminat­ions over the shoot-down by Turkey of a Russian fighter jet in November 2015.

Those circumstan­ces have led some Russian politician­s to accuse the West of complicity in the attack.

“They are afraid of that alliance. It’s a counterwei­ght to the European Union and NATO,” said Vladimir Zhirinovsk­y, a nationalis­t politician whos e o f t e n o u t l a n d i s h remarks on foreign policy are sometimes seen as a trial balloon for things the Kremlin would rather not say.

Many players risk losing out in any Russian-Turkish deal over the future of Syria, including the US-backed Syrian opposition, extremists with the Islamic State, and Syria’s Al-Qaida affiliate.

The United States, meanwhile, joined other nations in condemning the shooting.

“Our thoughts and prayers are with his loved ones, the Russian people, and with the other victims who were injured in this shooting,” Secretary of State John F Kerry said in a statement. “We stand ready to offer assistance to Russia and Turkey as they investigat­e this despicable attack, which was also an assault on the right of all diplomats to safely and securely advance and represent their nations around the world.”

Karlov started his diplomatic career in 1976 during the Soviet era and took the post in Ankara in July 2013, according to the embassy’s website. Putin referred to him as a “brilliant diplomat” who “had excellent relations with the leadership of Turkey and other political forces.”

The incident could spur even more vigorous efforts between Russia and Turkey to secure their role as Syria’s main power brokers and negotiate a settlement to the war on their terms. Aaron Stein, a resident senior fellow at the Atlantic Council’s Rafik Hariri Center for the Middle East, said that any fallout “will entirely depend on Russia’s reaction”.

“All indication­s thus far is that they will retain the relations they have built with Turkey since the rapprochem­ent a couple of months ago,” he added.

The recent cease-fire cobbled together was to Russia’s longterm benefit in Syria, while also addressing Turkey’s real concern about civilian casualties, Stein said.

 ?? SOCIAL MEDIA ?? (From left) American Caitlan Coleman and her husband, Canadian Joshua Boyle, are seen here with their two children in a video shared by the SITE Intelligen­ce group.
SOCIAL MEDIA (From left) American Caitlan Coleman and her husband, Canadian Joshua Boyle, are seen here with their two children in a video shared by the SITE Intelligen­ce group.
 ?? MAXIM SHEMETOV/AFP ?? Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov (right) and his Iranian counterpar­t Mohammad Javad Zarif lay flowers in front of a photo of Russian ambassador to Turkey, who was killed in Ankara, before their talks in Moscow yesterday.
MAXIM SHEMETOV/AFP Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov (right) and his Iranian counterpar­t Mohammad Javad Zarif lay flowers in front of a photo of Russian ambassador to Turkey, who was killed in Ankara, before their talks in Moscow yesterday.

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