Istanbul airport:Police believe Islamic State behind Istanbul airport attack by two suicide bombers.
Two
suicide bombers opened fire before blowing themselves up at the
entrance to the main international airport in Istanbul on Tuesday,
killing at least 10 people and wounding many more, Turkish officials and
witnesses said.
Police fired shots to try to stop the attackers just before they reached a security checkpoint at the arrivals hall of the Ataturk airport but they blew themselves up, one of the officials said.
Speaking in parliament, Justice Minister Bekir Bozdag said that based on initial information he could only confirm there had been one attacker. He said 10 people were killed and around 20 wounded.
"According to information I have received, at the entrance to the Ataturk Airport international terminal a terrorist first opened fire with a Kalashnikov and then blew themself up," he said in comments broadcast by CNN Turk.
The state-run Anadolu agency said around 60 people were wounded, six of them seriously.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack.
Ataturk is Turkey's
largest airport and a major transport hub for international travelers.
Pictures posted on social media from the site showed wounded people
lying on the ground inside and outside one of the terminal buildings.
A
witness told Reuters security officials prevented his taxi and other
cars from entering the airport at around 9:50 pm (02:50 p.m. EDT).
Drivers leaving the terminal shouted "Don't enter! A bomb exploded!"
from their windows to incoming traffic, he said.
Television
footage showed ambulances rushing to the scene. One witness told CNN
Turk that gunfire was heard from the car park at the airport. Taxis were
ferrying wounded people from the airport, the witness said.
FLIGHTS HALTEDThe head of Red Crescent, Kerem Kinik, said on CNN Turk that people should go to blood donation centres and not hospitals to give blood and called on people to avoid main roads to the airport to avoid blocking path of emergency vehicles.
Authorities halted the
takeoff of scheduled flights from the airport and passengers were
transferred to hotels, a Turkish Airlines official said. Earlier an
airport official said some flights to the airport had been diverted.
Turkey
has suffered a spate of bombings this year, including two suicide
attacks in tourist areas of Istanbul blamed on Islamic State, and two
car bombings in the capital, Ankara, which were claimed by a Kurdish
militant group.
In
the most recent attack, a car bomb ripped through a police bus in
central Istanbul during the morning rush hour, killing 11 people and
wounding 36 near the main tourist district, a major university and the
mayor's office.
Turkey,
which is part of the U.S.-led coalition against Islamic State, is also
fighting Kurdish militants in its largely Kurdish southeast.
Police
believe Islamic State was behind suicide bomb attacks at Istanbul's
international airport that killed 28 people on Tuesday, Dogan News
Agency said.
Dogan cited police sources as saying: "ISIS is behind the attack" at Ataturk Airport. A Turkish official, however, said it was too early to confirm any links when asked about the Dogan News Agency report.
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