Turkish police have released the first picture of the prime suspect in the Istanbul nightclub attack.
The
unnamed man is described as being from East Turkestan, Afghanistan or
Chechnya and Turkish intelligence services reportedly believe that he is
a member of the East Turkestan branch of ISIS. His exact nationality is
unknown.
Shocking
CCTV footage shows the moment the gunman began firing at revellers in
the Reina nightclub with a Kalashnikov during the New Year's Eve
massacre.
Turkish police have released the first
picture of the prime suspect in the Istanbul nightclub attack. The man,
as yet unnamed, is described as being from East Turkestan, Afghanistan
or Chechnya.
Turkish intelligence believes that the
suspect is a member of the East Turkestan branch of ISIS but still do
not know his name or precise nationality, Turkish media reported.
Sparks can be seen flying down the street as the Istanbul nightclub shooter walks towards the Reina nightclub.
People standing outside the club can be seen diving for cover as the gunman approaches firing indiscriminately.
After shooting a victim to the left of the screen, the gunman then runs into the nightclub
Mother-of-one
Hatice Koc'un is among the 39 people who were gunned down in
Istanbul. Turkey requires a female guard to be present to search women
revellers.
The clip, filmed at the entrance of the nightclub in Istanbul's Ortaköy district, shows the man shooting indiscriminately.
It comes as the first victims of the massacre have been named, including a female security guard and an Israeli Arab tourist.
The
gunman is seen casually strolling into the nightclub holding the
weapon before carrying out the killing spree while reportedly shouting
'Allahu Akbar'.
Fifteen
of the dead are believed to be foreign nationals, including one Israeli
woman and people from Saudi Arabia, Morocco, Lebanon and Libya.
A further 69 people are thought to have been wounded in the attack, which happened in the early hours of this morning.
Among the victims was a 27-year-old female private security guard from northeast Turkey.
Mother-of-one
Hatice Koc'un was working at the Reina nightclub on the night of the
attack as Turkish law requires a woman guard to be present to search
female clubbers.
The 27-year-old was working at the Reina nightclub on the night of the attack.
Her
family identified her body at the morgue today, Turkish media reported,
and are transporting it to the family home at western city of
Balikesir.
The
day before the attack, Koc'un, whose daughter is three years old,
shared pictures of herself on social media wearing sunglasses and
kissing the Turkish flag.
Meanwhile a 19-year-old Israeli woman has also been named as among the dead.
Leanne Nasser was on holiday with three female friends, all from the Arab-majority village of Tira in northern Israel.
One
of her friends was also injured, while the other two were
psychologically traumatised but physically unharmed, Israeli officials
told MailOnline.
They will return to Israel tonight, when the body will also be repatriated.
Four
other Israeli women were also caught up in the attack and were Arab
citizens of the Jewish State, an Israeli government source has told
MailOnline.
They were visiting Turkey to celebrate the New Year despite security concerns.
'Their
friends told them not to come because they thought it was too
dangerous,' said Shira Ben Zion, Israel's deputy consul in Istanbul.
Leanne Nasser was on holiday with three female friends, all from the Arab-majority village of Tira in northern Israel.
'They are very shocked and confused and they just want to get back home.'
Israeli officials are providing the women with consular support and helping them return to Israel, she added.
Also gunned down was police officer Burak Yildiz, who had been guarding the front of the upmarket riverside club.
The 21-year-old had reportedly only been in the job for 12 months when he was shot dead after the building had been stormed.
Victim Fatih Çakmak was also a policeman and on duty at the nightclub during the New Year celebrations.
He
has previously escaped an attack while working at the match between
Beşiktaş and Bursaspor last month when a car bomb exploded.
Club
worker Kenan Kutluk has also been named as a victim. His Facebook page
shows him posing next to footballer Diego Costa, who had previously
visited the club.
Also gunned down was police officer Burak Yildiz, who had been guarding the front of the upmarket riverside club.
Club worker Kenan Kutluk (right) has
also been named as a victim and his Facebook page shows him posing next
to footballer Diego Costa.
Another victim was Fatih Çakmak, another policeman who was on duty at the nightclub during the New Year celebrations.
While police have released two images of a suspect, they do not have yet have a name.
Recent terror attacks in Turkey have been carried out by groups such as ISIS and Kurdish militants.
Turkish police launched a major manhunt for the attacker, who Turkey's
Prime Minister Binali Yildirim revealed left his weapon inside the venue
and escaped by 'taking advantage of the chaos' that ensued.
He
also said there was no truth to reports that the attacker wore a Santa
hat, despite the CCTV footage from inside the club appearing to show
the gunman in a bobble hat.
The gunman was described as raining down 'a hail of bullets' on the New Year revellers and is still on the run.
The gunman, pictured, was described as raining down 'a hail of bullets' on the New Year revellers and is still on the run.
CCTV believed to be from inside the club shows a gunman wearing hat.
Crying relatives gather around the coffin of one of the victims of the Turkish nightclub massacre ahead of a funeral.
A young boy breaks down and rests his head on top of the coffin of one of the victims of the massacre.
A man kisses the top of the coffin of Ayhan Arik, one of the 39 people to be killed in the attack last night.
People in the Turkish capital have
began burying the dead, just 13 hours after the attack as per Muslim
tradition which dictates people should be buried as soon as possible
after their death.
Turkey's president Tayyip Erdogan vowed to fight against attacks by terror groups and their backers.
In
a statement he said: 'As a nation, we will fight to the end against not
just the armed attacks of terror groups and the forces behind them, but
also against their economic, political and social attacks.
'They
are trying to create chaos, demoralize our people, and destabilize our
country with abominable attacks which target civilians.
'We
will retain our cool-headedness as a nation, standing more closely
together, and we will never give ground to such dirty games.'
Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim
(pictured) revealed the gunman left his weapon inside the venue and
escaped by 'taking advantage of the chaos' that ensued.
This morning armed police with shields formed a ring of steel around the nightclub in Istanbul, where 39 people were shot dead.
Police secure the area as the convoy
of Turkish Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu leaves after his visit to
the nightclub where the attack took place.
Special forces stand guard outside the
nightclub this morning. A further 69 people are thought to have been
wounded in the attack.
This morning a Turkish police boar was anchored on the Bosphorus close to the nightclub as a manhunt for the killer continues.
A Turkish policeman stands guard next
to the scene. Turkish interior minister Suleyman Soylu said the attacker
has not been identified and is still at large.
Nightclub owner Mehmet Kocarslan told
Turkey's Hurriyet news site that security at the venue had been
increased over the past 10 days following warnings from American
intelligence officers
The governor of Istanbul Vasip Sahin confirmed the shooting was a terrorist attack.
He
said: 'Unfortunately (the gunman) rained bullets in a very cruel and
merciless way on innocent people who were there to celebrate New Year's
and have fun.'
Interior minister Suleyman Soylu said the attacker has not been identified and is still at large.
'Our security forces have started the necessary operations. God willing he will be caught in a short period of time'
Prime Minister Binali Yildirim, right, speaks with a man in hospital who was wounded during the attack on a nightclub
Nightclub
owner Mehmet Kocarslan told Turkey's Hurriyet news site that security
at the venue had been increased over the past 10 days following warnings
from American intelligence officers.
He stated that the attack had been carried out with Kalashnikov rifles.
Witness
Sinem Uyanik told the Associated Press she saw several bodies in the
club and her husband, Lutfu Uyanik, was wounded during the killing
spree.
'Before I could understand what was happening, my husband fell on top me,' she said outside Istanbul's Sisli Hospital.
'I had to lift several bodies from on top of me before I could get out.'
Relatives of the victims gather outside of the forensic medical institute in Istanbul for news about their loved ones.
Many of the victims' relatives broke down in tears as they waited on news on their family members
A woman falls to the ground in tears after hearing bad news about one of her loved ones following the nightclub attack
A man and a woman are led away from the institute weeping. The building is where the dead bodies have been taken
Relatives embrace and cry as they wait for news of their family members following the New Year attack
An ambulance brings another body into the Forensic Medical Center in Istanbul following the attack
She added that her husband had survived the attack.
Mehmet Dag, 22, was passing by the club and said he saw the suspect shoot at a police officer and a bystander.
He said the suspect then targeted security, gunning them down and entering the club.
He
added: 'Once he went in, we don't know what happened. There were gun
sounds, and after two minutes the sound of an explosion.'
CCTV footage from outside the club showed the gunman walking down the street to the entrance before opening fire at a policeman.
A bullet ricochets off a vehicle after the gunman opens fire at the nightclub in Istanbul, where 39 people were killed.
Footage filmed by Dag a showed a police officer lying on the ground outside the club and a woman in a pool of blood.
A
handful of WNBA players, including Essence Carson, Chelsea Gray and
Jantel Lavender of the Los Angeles Sparks, were next door when the
deadly shooting started.
Sparks coach Brian Agler confirmed that Carson had texted him that the three players were OK.
She
had tweeted earlier in the evening that she was 'stuck inside of the
club because of `terror' shooting in Istanbul. Praises to the most
high.'
Medics carry a wounded person at the scene after an attack at the popular nightclub in Istanbul
Thirty five people were killed and a further 40 were injured in the atrocity, the city's governor announced
The taxi used by the killer to travel to the Reina nighclub is loaded on to the back of a pick-up truck
Police were seen towing away a taxi from outside the club, which the gunman is believed to have entered
Elsewhere
in the city, a gunman opened fire on a mosque just hours after the
nightclub attack. People had gathered at the mosque for prayers when the
gunman opened fire with a rifle.
Police have launched an investigation but authorities say there is no reason to believe there was a 'political cause'.
It has been suggested that the incident might be linked to a row between a father and son.
Just
13 hours after the nightclub shooting relatives started burying their
dead, as Muslim tradition dictates people should be buried as soon as
possible after death.
The British Foreign Office said it is liaising with authorities to establish whether any Britons were caught up in the massacre.
Foreign
Secretary Boris Johnson tweeted: 'Thoughts with Turkey after cowardly
act of terrorism in Istanbul nightclub attack. We stand shoulder to
shoulder with our Turkish friends.'
The White House condemned the shooting as a 'horrific terrorist attack', and pledged their support to Turkey.
German
Chancellor Angela Merkel has sent her condolences to the victims of the
Istanbul attack, saying 'terrorists ... have carried out an inhumane
and devious attack on people who wanted to celebrate the New Year
together.'
A Turkish police officer stands on guard at the site of the armed attack which claimed 39 lives
Ambulances outside the scene of the shooting, in which many people are believed to have been injured
The city's governor has said the massacre was a terrorist attack as almost 40 people were gunned down
Turkish special force police officers and ambulances at the site of the armed attack at 1.15am on New Year's Day in Istanbul
'My thoughts this morning are with the victims, their families and friends,' she said.
Russian president Vladimir Putin has sent Turkey's president a telegram of condolences.
'It
is hard to imagine a more cynical crime than killing innocent people
during New Year celebrations,' Putin said in the message.
'However, terrorists don't share moral values. Our common duty is to combat terrorists' aggression,' Putin added.
Survivors embrace after the atrocity,
which saw a gunman armed with an automatic weapon open fire inside a
busy nightclub, killing 39 people
Ambulances were on the scene within minutes of the attack, which claimed 39 lives and left 69 wounded
Armed police on the scene of the
atrocity. It is estimated 17,000 police officers were on duty during the
New Year's Eve celebrations
An
estimated 17,000 police officers had been on duty in the city on New
Years Eve. Turkey has been heavily hit by terror attacks in 2016.
The nightclub lies on the European side of the Bosphorus Strait which divides Istanbul in two.
Yesterday
Neslihan Dogruol, a restaurant owner in a chic Istanbul neighborhood,
said she hopes for peace in 2017 following a year filled with 'unrest
and death.'
Yesterday Neslihan Dogruol, a
restaurant owner in a chic Istanbul neighborhood, said she hopes for
peace in 2017 following a year filled with 'unrest and death.
Security measures have been heightened
in major Turkish cities and traffic leading up to key squares in
Istanbul and the capital, Ankara, were closed
'2016 affected everyone badly,' she said, referring to major attacks that hit Turkey in the past year.
The restaurant, adorned with snowflakes and tiny decorative lights for the evening, will have fewer people for dinner, she said.
At
a commemoration for the 45 people killed in twin bombings on December
10 in Istanbul, Murat Manoglu hoped for a better year ahead.
'We lived through terrible days,' he said.
Security
measures were heightened in major Turkish cities. Traffic leading up to
key squares in Istanbul and the capital, Ankara, had been closed.
A survivor is taken away on a stretcher by ambulance staff after the attack at the nightclub
There is a huge police presence outside the Reina nightclub in Istanbul after gunmen opened fire
It is believed that 17,000 police officers had been on duty in the Turkish city before the attack
The attack happened in one of Istanbul's busiest nightspots as people celebrated New Year's Eve
European cities on high alert as revellers welcome in 2017
The attack in Istanbul came as police in cities across Europe were on high alert over fears of a New Year terror attack.
In
London, where 2017 was welcomed in with a huge fireworks display around
the London Eye, more police than ever before had lined the streets.
Some
3,000 officers patrolled the British capital with guns and sniffer dogs
and for the first time ever, armed police were on the London
Underground network.
On guard: Two officers stand at the ready in central London where more than 110,000 people gathered for New Year celebrations
Police officers gathered for a meeting as they prepared to patrol the streets while hundreds gathered to watch the fireworks.
A steel wall was also erected on London's Westminster Bridge to prevent a lorry attack
In
Berlin, which is still mourning the truck terror attack that killed 12
people earlier this month, revellers around the Brandenburg Gate were
guarded by hundreds of armed police.
In addition concrete blocks and heavy armoured vehicles were put in place along thoroughfares.
On guard: Citizens of Berlin, still
mourning the truck terror attack that killed 12 earlier this month, were
guarded by hundreds of armed police who placed concrete blocks and
heavy armoured vehicles along thoroughfares near the Brandenburg Gate.
Cologne: Police officers in the German city stand guard in front of Hauptbahnhof main railway station.
Paris: France's President Francois
Hollande reviews police officers as he visits the security measures at
the Champs Elysees before ushering in 2017.
In
Cologne, where 600 women were sexually assaulted amid last year's
festivities, around 1,800 officers were deployed compared to just 140 in
2015.
In
Paris yesterday, French President Francois Hollande met with beefed up
security forces who were guarding celebrations around the Eiffel Tower.
In
Brussels, which also experienced a terror attack last year, and in
Madrid, party-goers were searched by armed police, who kept a careful
eye on the swelling crowds.
Brussels: Revellers queue to get in
the De Brouckere square for the fireworks performance as Belgium's
police officers conduct searches.
Madrid: Security personnel and access control guards stand at the Puerta del Sol square in the Spanish capital.
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