Daily Dispatch

Turkey detains six over envoy assassinat­ion

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TURKISH authoritie­s were yesterday holding six people over the assassinat­ion of the Russian ambassador to Ankara by an off-duty policeman, as Russia urgently sought answers over the murder.

With the Turkish capital already on high alert after a string of attacks this year, an individual also fired outside the US embassy in Ankara overnight in a separate incident.

President Vladimir Putin declared “we have to know who directed the hand of the killer”, and the Kremlin said a Russian investigat­ive team was flying to Turkey to probe the murder.

An unpreceden­ted three-way meeting between the foreign ministers of Turkey, Russia and Iran in Moscow over the Syria crisis was meanwhile set to go ahead yesterday despite the killing.

Ambassador Andrei Karlov was shot four times in the back by Turkish policeman Mevlut Mert Altintas, 22, as he opened an exhibition of Russian photograph­y in Ankara.

Dramatic images showed the ambassador stumble and then crash to the ground on his back as the attacker brandished his gun at terrified onlookers who cowered behind cocktail tables.

The gunman shouted “Allahu Akbar” (“God is great”) and then said all those responsibl­e for what had happened in Syria and Aleppo would be held accountabl­e.

Altintas had set off the metal detector security check when he entered the exhibition in central Ankara as he was carrying a gun, the pro-government Sabah daily said.

But after showing his police ID, he was waved through and allowed to proceed.

The Hurriyet daily added that Altintas, who had worked for Ankara’s anti-riot police for the past two-and-a-half years, had stayed at a nearby hotel to prepare for the attack.

It said Altintas, who was off-duty at the time, had put on a suit and tie and shaved at the hotel before heading to the exhibition centre.

He was later killed by police after shootout that lasted over 15 minutes.

Altintas was born in the town of Soke in Aydin province in western Turkey, and attended a special school for training future policemen.

Six people have been detained over the attack, including the sister, mother, father and uncle of Altintas, Turkish media said.

The mayor of Ankara, Melih Gokcek, known for his outspoken comments, speculated on his official Twitter account that the attacker might be linked to the group of the exiled leader Fethullah Gulen, blamed for the July 15 coup aimed at toppling President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

His suggestion has yet to be echoed by other officials but was repeated in the pro-government press, which claimed what Ankara terms the Fethullah Terror Organisati­on (Feto) was behind the attack.

“An attack on friendship by treacherou­s Feto,” said Sabah. “A bullet from Feto,” added the Star daily.

The mainstream Hurriyet said that authoritie­s were investigat­ing the assassin’s possible links to the Gulen movement.

They were particular­ly focusing on friends Altintas may have had at the police academy, it added.

Gulen, who denies having any link to the failed coup bid, issued a statement condemning “in the strongest terms this heinous act of terror”.

Hours after the assassinat­ion, an individual fired outside the main gate of the US embassy in Ankara, the mission said in a statement. a

It said no one was hurt and the individual was detained but the embassy and consulates in Istanbul and Adana were closed for normal operations.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said a group of Russian investigat­ors were flying out to Turkey to probe the murder in a move agreed by Putin and Erdogan.

The corpse of Karlov was in an Ankara morgue and would be flown back to Moscow, Turkish media reports said.

The killing came after days of protests in Turkey over Russia’s role in Syria, although Moscow and Ankara are now working closely together to evacuate citizens from the battered city of Aleppo.

Putin called the killing of Russia’s ambassador a “provocatio­n” aimed at sabotaging warming ties between Moscow and Ankara and efforts to resolve the conflict in Syria.

“There can be only one answer to this – stepping up the fight against terrorism, and the bandits will feel this,” Putin said.

Turkey and Russia stand on opposite sides of the Syria conflict, with Ankara backing rebels trying to topple Moscow’s ally President Bashar al-Assad.

But the rhetoric has warmed considerab­ly since a reconcilia­tion deal was signed earlier this year and the tripartite meeting in Moscow yesterday was just the latest in a series of contacts.

Born in 1954 in Moscow, Karlov was a career diplomat who had began his career under the USSR in 1976.

He was Russian ambassador to North Korea from 2001-2006. — AFP

 ?? Picture: REUTERS ?? SYMBOL OF RECONCILIA­TION: Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, right, and his Turkish counterpar­t Mevlut Cavusoglu lay flowers in memory of the murdered Russian ambassador to Turkey, Andrei Karlov, before their talks in Moscow yesterday
Picture: REUTERS SYMBOL OF RECONCILIA­TION: Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, right, and his Turkish counterpar­t Mevlut Cavusoglu lay flowers in memory of the murdered Russian ambassador to Turkey, Andrei Karlov, before their talks in Moscow yesterday

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