Turkish police arrest female suspect over deadly Istanbul bombing
Turkey said on Monday it had
arrested 46 people, including the perpetrator, in relation to the deadly bomb
attack in central Istanbul at the weekend, which left six people dead.
Photos and video posted by Turkish
media showed police storming an apartment where they held a Syrian woman named
Ahlam Albashir, whom they claimed had left an explosives-filled bag on a bench
along Istiklal Street, a mile-long pedestrian avenue filled with shops,
cultural sites and diplomatic outposts.
Photos showed police grabbing Ms
Albashir, who was dressed in a purple hoodie emblazoned with the words “New
York”, and taking her into custody.
No group has claimed responsibility
for the attack. But Turkish interior minister Suleyman Soylu blamed Syria-based
Kurdish militant groups, which issued statements strenuously denying
responsibility for the attack.
The bombing killed six Turkish
citizens, including a father and his three-year-old daughter. It shocked the
nation and dominated headlines and news broadcasts.
On Monday morning, passers-by left
red carnations at the site of the bombing in remembrance of the dead and their
families.
“We will retaliate against those who are
responsible for this heinous terror attack,” Mr Soylu said, according to the
state-run Anadolu news agency.
Istiklal Street is one of the most
heavily surveilled parts of Turkey, under the scrutiny of a wide network of
private and government security cameras. It is constantly patrolled by
plainclothes informants and officers, as well as by conspicuous contingents of
heavily armed police.
Turkey’s justice minister Bekir
Bozdag said the suspect sat on a bench near the scene of the blast for more
than 40 minutes before the explosion, which took place minutes after she walked
away. Authorities claim that the woman disclosed that she had been trained by
Syrian Kurdish armed groups.
“There are two possibilities,” Mr Bozdag told
news channel A Haber. “There was a bomb set up inside a bag. Either she
detonated it, or someone detonated remotely.”
The consulates of France, Russia,
Greece, Sweden, the Netherlands and Greece lie along Istiklal Street, while the
United Kingdom’s sprawling diplomatic outpost is nearby.
Turkey has suffered numerous
terrorist attacks over the years, including an Isis suicide bombing on the same
street in 2016. The attacks often prompt security worries that tend to rally
the public to the side of the authorities.
Mr Soylu claimed that the attack had
been ordered by the People’s Union Party (PYD), an affiliate of the Kurdistan
Workers’ Party (PKK), both of which are considered terrorist organisations by
Ankara. Without citing evidence, he claimed that the bombing had been ordered
by PYD officials in Kobane, a crucial city under the control of Syrian Kurds and also known as Ayn
al-Arab.
“Our assessment is that the order
for the deadly terror attack came from Ayn al-Arab in northern Syria, where the
PKK/YPG has its Syrian headquarters,” Mr Soylu said.
On Monday, both the PKK and the
Syrian Democratic Forces, an umbrella group that includes the PYD, strongly
rejected any suggestion that they had been involved in the attack. “Our people
and the democratic public know well that we don’t have anything to do with this
attack,” said a statement from the PKK published by the Firsat news agency. “We
will not directly target civilians, and we do not accept actions targeting
civilians.”
Turkish president Recep Tayyip
Erdogan, who is currently in Indonesia for the G20 summit, has been lobbying
Iran and Russia, both powerbrokers in Syria, to greenlight a Turkish attack on
Kobane and other northern Syrian cities under the control of Kurds. The attack
may increase momentum for some kind of military response.
”I don’t think there will be any
kind of widespread operation launched without the commander-in-chief in the
country,” said Yusuf Erim, an analyst for TRT World, Turkey’s publicly funded
news channel. “I do think the long-spoken-of cross-border operation is
definitely back on the agenda, and very high on the agenda.”
Sunday’s bombing could have
political implications ahead of crucial elections due to take place in June
2023. President Erdogan and his Justice and Development Party are polling
poorly against a coalition of opposition groups led by the Republican People’s
Party (CHP).
Devlet Bahceli, leader of a
far-right party that is part of Mr Erdogan’s government, demanded the
shuttering of the country’s main Kurdish-led opposition party, the Democratic
People’s Party (HDP), and accused the CHP of backing the PKK. Meanwhile,
CHP-affiliated news outlets accused the government of wooing the HDP in the
weeks preceding the bombing.
Mr Soylu also sought to implicate
the United States in the bombing, accusing Washington of backing the PKK. The
US and other Western countries collaborate with Syrian Kurds in their efforts
to contain Isis. Mr Soylu likened Washington’s public condemnation of the
bombing to “the killer arriving as one of the first to the scene of the crime”.
The attack could also have
international consqequences. As a Nato member, Turkey has long complained that
other partners in the alliance fail to address its security concerns
adequately. Turkey has demanded that Finland and Sweden crack down on what it
perceived as their harbouring of PKK sympathisers and supporters, as a
precondition of granting them rapid accession to Nato.
Following the attack, “we might see
a Turkey that is less willing to compromise” on Nato expansion, said one
political insider.