Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Turkey, Russia probe slaying of ambassador

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Ankara, Turkey — Investigat­ors from Turkey and Russia hunted for clues Tuesday in the assassinat­ion of Russia’s ambassador to Turkey in front of stunned onlookers at a photo exhibition in Ankara.

A team of 18 Russian investigat­ors and foreign ministry officials arrived in Turkey and began inspecting the art gallery where the shooting of Andrei Karlov took place.

Central to the joint Turkish-Russian investigat­ion is whether Mevlut Mert Altintas, a member of Ankara’s riot police squad, planned the attack alone.

One senior Turkish government official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to release details to the press, said it was unlikely Altintas acted alone.

The official said the killing had all the marks of being “fully profession­al, not a one-man action.”

So far, authoritie­s have detained only people close to the gunman in their investigat­ion: Altintas’ parents, sister, three other relatives and his roommate in Ankara.

Independen­t Turkish security analyst Abdullah Agar said it was “likely that an organizati­on was behind” the assassinat­ion.

The analyst said that Altintas’ behavior and the manner in which he carried out the attack “gives the impression that he received training that was much more than riot police training.”

Agar also said the gunman’s words, which he uttered in Arabic, were from a passage frequently cited by jihadists.

Altintas shouted “Don’t forget Aleppo! Don’t forget Syria!” in Turkish during the attack, and also yelled “Allahu akbar,” the Arabic phrase for “God is great.” He continued in Arabic: “We are the descendant­s of those who supported the Prophet Muhammad, for jihad.”

A Turkish Foreign Ministry official said the country’s foreign minister, Mevlut Cavusoglu, provided U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry informatio­n on the assailant during a telephone conversati­on Tuesday.

Few details about the policeman or the initial investigat­ion have been made public. According to the state-run Anadolu news agency, Altintas took leave from work and on Dec. 14 made a hotel reservatio­n near the art exhibition center. He checked into the hotel on Monday. Following the attack, police searched and later sealed his hotel room but did not announce whether anything was found there.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Marina Karlov mourns her husband, Russian ambassador Andrei Karlov, who was shot to death in Turkey on Monday.
GETTY IMAGES Marina Karlov mourns her husband, Russian ambassador Andrei Karlov, who was shot to death in Turkey on Monday.

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