San Francisco Chronicle

Woman arrested in Turkey bombing

- By Ben Hubbard and Safak Timur

ISTANBUL — Turkish authoritie­s arrested a woman Monday they suspect was behind the deadly bombing in central Istanbul a day earlier, saying she had been sent to Turkey from Syria by Kurdish militants to carry out the attack.

The bombing Sunday on a crowded shopping street popular with both Turks and tourists killed six people — all of them Turkish nationals — who belonged to three different families, according to officials. It was the deadliest such attack in Turkey in more than five years, raising painful memories of the days when bombings by Kurdish and Islamic State militants often struck Turkish cities.

Turkey accused the United States of complicity in the attack because the U.S. has long maintained a military partnershi­p with a Kurdish-led militia in Syria. Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu, during a visit to the site of the attack Monday, dismissed condolence messages from the United States, saying this was like “the killer is among the first ones returning to the scene.”

The United States is an ally of Turkey in NATO, but Soylu's accusation of complicity was rooted in the long-standing U.S. partnershi­p with a Kurdish-led militia in northeaste­rn Syria formed to battle the Islamic State, which ruled a so-called caliphate in parts of Syria and Iraq for years.

U.S. officials have hailed the Syrian Democratic Forces, their Kurdish-led partners in Syria, as reliable and effective fighters who were essential to the U.S.led effort to destroy the Islamic State, which was driven from its last patch of territory in Syria in March 2019.

But that partnershi­p infuriated Turkey, which considers the Syrian militia a branch of the Kurdistan Workers' Party, or PKK, a Kurdish group that has been fighting a war with the Turkish state for decades. Turkey, the United States and the European Union all consider the PKK a terrorist group.

On Monday, Istanbul police identified the suspect in the bombing as Ahlam al-Bashir and said she had been arrested overnight in Istanbul.

Police said she had crossed into Turkey illegally from northern Syria to carry out the attack. The explosion had been caused by a small amount of TNT left in a bag on the street, police said.

Authoritie­s searched footage from 1,200 security cameras, raided 21 sites and detained 46 other people before finding her, the police statement said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States