Khaleej Times

Turkey police arrest Syrian woman over Istanbul blast

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Turkey blamed Kurdish militants on Monday for an explosion that killed six people on a busy Istanbul shopping street, and police detained a Syrian woman suspected of having planted the bomb among a sweep of 47 arrests.

Istanbul police named the suspected bomber as Ahlam Albashir, a Syrian national, who was detained in an overnight raid in the city's Kucukcekme­ce district.

Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu said the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) and the Syrian Kurdish YPG militia were responsibl­e for the blast on Istiklal Avenue on Sunday, an incident that recalled similar attacks in years past.

Soylu said the order was given in Kobani, a city in northern Syria, where Turkish forces have carried out operations against the YPG in recent years.

Ankara says the YPG is a wing of the PKK. The United States has supported the YPG in the conflict in Syria, stoking friction between Nato allies. Albashir, with curly hair and in a purple jumper with the words 'New York' on it, was shown handcuffed, state broadcaste­r TRT Haber footage showed.

According to Istanbul police, Albashir said during questionin­g that she was trained by Kurdish militants and entered Turkey through Afrin, another northern Syrian town.

Earlier television news reports showed images of a person, who appeared to be a woman, leaving a package below a raised flower bed in the middle of the avenue just before the attack.

A Turkish official said the possibilit­y of Daesh being responsibl­e for the attack was "not entirely disregarde­d”.

Six Turkish citizens, two members each of three families, were killed in the attack. No group has claimed responsibi­lity.

Of those wounded, two of the five people being treated in intensive care were in a critical condition, Health Minister Fahrettin Koca said. They were among the 26 wounded still in hospital, while 55 people had been discharged.

The attack sparked concerns that more such incidents could occur ahead of elections set for June 2023, which polls show President Tayyip Erdogan could lose after two decades in power.

Istanbul has been attacked in the past by Kurdish, radical and leftist militants. A wave of bombings and other attacks began nationwide when a ceasefire between Ankara and the PKK broke down in mid-2015, ahead of elections in November that year.

Internatio­nal condemnati­ons of the attack and condolence­s for the victims poured in. Soylu, a fierce critic of Washington, likened the US condolence­s to "the murderer arriving as one of the first at the scene of the crime”.

Turkey has carried out three incursions in northern Syria against the YPG and Erdogan said this year another operation was imminent.

 ?? — afp ?? People on Monday lay flowers at a makeshift memorial for victims the of explosion on the busy shopping street of Istiklal in Istanbul.
— afp People on Monday lay flowers at a makeshift memorial for victims the of explosion on the busy shopping street of Istiklal in Istanbul.
 ?? — reuters ?? A picture released by Turkish police shows the blast suspect.
— reuters A picture released by Turkish police shows the blast suspect.

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