Thirty-nine people were killed and dozens wounded Sunday when a gunman stormed a popular Istanbul nightclub and sprayed bullets at revellers celebrating the New Year.
The assailant shot dead a policeman and a civilian at the entrance to the Reina nightclub and then went on a shooting rampage inside, officials said.
Istanbul governor Vasip Sahin branded it a “terror attack”, the latest to strike Turkey after a wave of assaults by Islamic State jihadists and Kurdish militants.
No-one has yet claimed responsibility for the nightclub horror.
Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu said the attacker escaped and was now the target of a major manhunt, expressing hope the suspect “would be captured soon”.
Prime Minister Binali Yildirim said the gunman was still at large after slipping away unnoticed after the attack. But he denied earlier reports the person had used a Santa Claus costume as disguise.
The attack took place at the swanky Reina nightclub in the Ortakoy district on the banks of the Bosphorus on the European side of the city.
There were reportedly as many as 700 people celebrating the New Year which had chimed just over an hour before the attack.
The club is one of Istanbul’s most exclusive nightspots. It is notoriously hard to get past the bouncers who seek out only the best dressed.
Television pictures showed shellshocked revellers in party dress — men in suits and women in cocktail dresses — emerging dazed from the scene of the massacre.
The attack sparked mass panic, with some diving into the Bosphorus Strait between Europe and Asia to escape the bullets. Rescuers battled to salvage them from the water.
Thirty-nine people were killed with another 65 being treated in hospital, the interior minister Soylu said. Four of those injured were said to be in a serious condition.
According to Dogan news agency, 35 of the victims had been identified, 24 of whom were foreigners and 11 Turks.
After a bloody 2016, the authorities were on their guard and at least 17,000 police officers were deployed in the city for the New Year festivities.
Turkey has endured bomb attacks at an airport, a suicide bombing at a wedding and an attack near a top football stadium last year.
The carnage has been blamed either on Kurdish militants or the Islamic State jihadist extremist group.
Last month, the Russian ambassador was shot dead at an Ankara art gallery by an off-duty policeman shouting “Allahu Akbar” (God is greatest) and “Don’t forget Aleppo”.
The Turkish army is waging a four-month incursion in Syria to oust the IS group and Kurdish militants from the border area.
Rebels from the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) and what is considered its radical offshoot the Kurdistan Freedom Falcons (TAK) have claimed a spate of attacks since the collapse of a ceasefire in the summer of 2015.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said in a statement that with such attacks, “they are working to destroy our country’s morale and create chaos”.
US National Security Council spokesman Ned Price said Washington condemned in the strongest terms the “horrific terrorist attack”.
“We reaffirm the support of the United States for Turkey, our NATO ally, in our shared determination to confront and defeat all forms of terrorism,” he said.
Russian President Vladimir Putin and German Chancellor Angela Merkel expressed their condolences to Erdogan.
“It’s hard to imagine a crime more cynical than the killing of civilians during a New Year’s celebration,” Putin said.
Merkel said: “In Istanbul they committed an inhumane, sneaky attack on people who wanted to celebrate the turn of the year.”
NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg tweeted: “Tragic start to 2017 in #Istanbul.”
Several foreigners including many nationals of Arab countries were among the dead in the New Year shooting rampage at an Istanbul nightclub, officials said on Sunday.
A total of 39 people were killed in the assault at the exclusive Reina club on the shores of the Bosphorus and 65 injured, officials said.
Here is a breakdown of the nationality of the dead and wounded known so far given by their respective countries.
Riyadh’s consulate in Istanbul said that Saudis were among the victims, but gave no figures. The Asharq Al-Awsat newspaper however quoted a consulate source as saying that five Saudis including two women had died and 11 other people were injured. Al-Arabiya television also spoke of five dead and nine wounded.
The foreign ministry in Amman said three Jordanians were killed and four injured, the official Petra news agency reported.
A spokeman for Iraq’s foreign ministry said that three Iraqis died in the attack.
The Lebanese foreign ministry announced the death of three Lebanese and said another four were wounded.
“I was saved by my passport which I was carrying right near my heart,” one of the injured, Francois al-Asmar, told Lebanese television from his hospital bed.
The Tunisian foreign ministry said on its Facebook page that two Tunisians died, with media reports saying the victims were a businessman and his wife.
India’s external affairs minister said two nationals were among the dead, naming them as Abis Rizvi, the son of a former MP, and a woman, Khushi Shah.
The Israeli foreign ministry said a young Arab Israeli woman, 18-year-old Lian Nasser, had died.
Belgium’s foreign ministry confirmed that a man in his 20s, a Belgian-Turkish dual national, was killed.
Paris said a French-Tunisian dual national woman had died along with her Tunisian husband. It was not immediately known if they were among the dead listed by Tunis.
Another three French people were injured, the foreign ministry said.
One Libyan was killed and three others hurt in the attack, according to the north African country’s foreign ministry.
Three Moroccans were wounded, the MAP news agency quoted the embassy in Ankara as saying.
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