Chattanooga Times Free Press

Focus on Chechen extremist

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ISTANBUL — Attention focused Friday on whether a Chechen extremist known to be a top lieutenant in the Islamic State group was involved in the suicide attacks that killed 44 people at Istanbul’s Ataturk Airport.

U.S. Rep. Michael McCaul, chairman of the House Committee on Homeland Security, told CNN Akhmed Chatayev directed Tuesday night’s attack at one of the world’s busiest airports. The CIA and White House declined to comment on McCaul’s assertion and officials said the investigat­ion of the bombing is still ongoing. McCaul could not be reached for further comment.

Turkish officials also were not able to confirm Chatayev’s role. The Sabah newspaper, which is close to the government, said police had launched a manhunt for him.

McCaul said Chatayev’s whereabout­s are unknown. The 35-year-old one-armed militant, who fought in Chechnya against Russian forces and their local allies in the early 2000s before fleeing to the West, was put on the U.S. list of suspected terrorists in 2015. That same year, he resurfaced in an IS video as the commander of the group’s Chechen battalion in Syria.

Although no one has claimed responsibi­lity for the airport attack, the Islamic State group is suspected, and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan repeated Friday that IS was “most probably” behind it. The group has boasted of having cells in Turkey and other countries.

The state-run Anadolu Agency reported Friday the Bakirkoy Public Prosecutor’s office had establishe­d the identity of two of the airport attackers, Rakim Bulgarov and Vadim Osmanov, and was trying to identify the third. Other media reports have given different versions of Osmanov’s name.

Anadolu said Osmanov’s identity was determined through a photocopy of his passport, which he submitted to a realtor in order to rent a house in Istanbul’s Fatih district. Police were also trying to access informatio­n on a destroyed computer found in a trash bin near the house.

The Anadolu report did not provide the nationalit­ies of the suspects. On Thursday, a Turkish official said the three attackers were from Russia, Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan.

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