Explosion and Gunfire reported at Istanbul Airport

Turgon

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FOTCM Member
And this just a day after the Turkish government apologized to Russia of sorts for downing one of their fighter jets.

http://m.sputniknews.com/europe/20160628/1042108262/istanbul-airport-explosion.html

A pair of explosions and gunfire have been reported at Istanbul's Ataturk airport.

Taxis are reportedly carrying injured people away from the airport. Turkish officials currently suspect that the incident was a suicide attack.

The airport has been closed. No deaths have been confirmed at this time.

Gunfire was reportedly heard from coming from the airport parking deck.

Local media reports that two individuals threw hand grenades into the airport, though this is unconfirmed at this time.
 
Turgon said:
And this just a day after the Turkish government apologized to Russia of sorts for downing one of their fighter jets.

The CIA just can't be any more blatant, can they?!
 
Looks like they're starting to release numbers:

10 dead and 40 injured in 'suicide bomb' at Istanbul's Ataturk airport
_http://dailym.ai/290YElP
 
Turgon said:
And this just a day after the Turkish government apologized to Russia of sorts for downing one of their fighter jets.

http://m.sputniknews.com/europe/20160628/1042108262/istanbul-airport-explosion.html

A pair of explosions and gunfire have been reported at Istanbul's Ataturk airport.

Taxis are reportedly carrying injured people away from the airport. Turkish officials currently suspect that the incident was a suicide attack.

The airport has been closed. No deaths have been confirmed at this time.

Gunfire was reportedly heard from coming from the airport parking deck.

Local media reports that two individuals threw hand grenades into the airport, though this is unconfirmed at this time.


Interesting timing, that was my thinking also.
 
John Kerry's remarks from Aspen Co. As always the usual suspects seem so very concerned about finding the culprits.

5c5a0bca8058fbb1f9cc1be45b1d4b65.png

_://twitter.com/StateDept/status/747928988392132609?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw

Bill Carlino ‏@carlino_bill 6h6 hours ago
@StateDept @JohnKerry you, Obama and Hillary created the policies that led to these conditions, traitor

Keiko ‏@Keikoninjafairy 6h6 hours ago
@StateDept @JohnKerry They are violent actors now? Sounds like they auditioned for a part in a play. Smh

John Kirby Verified account
‏@statedeptspox
.@JohnKerry: we have to come to aid of countries on front lines of fight against extremism. Must maintain relentless pressure on Da'esh.

images



RT
ISIS-suspected blasts rock Istanbul’s largest airport Live updates
https://www.rt.com/news/348738-blasts-istanbul-ataturk-airport/
Edited time: 29 Jun, 2016 05:49
Bodies are seen outside Turkey's largest airport, Istanbul Ataturk, Turkey, following a blast, June 28, 2016. © Ismail Coskun / IHLAS News Agency / Reuters


:offtopic:
Oh yeah, Aspen Co. to Denver Co. He seems oh so nice and close to the bunker.
http://lunarmeteoritehunters.blogspot.fr/
aspenflightmap_vp_1200.ashx


 
1984 said:
Looks like they're starting to release numbers:

10 dead and 40 injured in 'suicide bomb' at Istanbul's Ataturk airport
_http://dailym.ai/290YElP

Unfortunately, the number of dead and injured people is now much higher:

https://www.rt.com/news/348735-explosion-atatukr-reports-injured/

At least 36 people have been killed and over 140 injured in three blasts that rocked Istanbul’s Ataturk airport, according to Turkish officials. Foreigners could be among the dead.

The blasts occurred in the airport’s international arrivals terminal.

Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim confirmed to the media that the death toll from the attacks has risen to 36, adding that foreigners could be among the victims. Five of those killed in the attacks were officers.

Another 147 people were injured in the blasts, Turkish Justice Minister Bekir Bozdag said.

Yildirim also stated that the attackers arrived at the airport by taxi and that initial findings point to Islamic State responsibility (IS, previously ISIS/ISIL) for the attacks.

“It showed once again that terrorism is a global threat and defeating it requires global cooperation. All early indications suggest that the IS was behind the atrocity, but the investigation is ongoing," the Prime Minister said.

The attacks on the airport involved three suicide bombers, according to Yildirim. Investigation revealed that all three opened fire before detonating their explosive devices.

On Tuesday evening, three suicide bombers stormed the airport with assault weapons and opened fire before blowing themselves up. One of the attackers fired shots from an automatic rifle in the departures hall, according to Reuters. All three reportedly detonated their explosive devices around the arrivals hall.

Four armed men were reportedly seen running away from the terminal building after the explosions, according to Turkey’s NTV channel.

According to some Turkish media, the blasts targeted two separate locations in the airport.

The deadly blasts coincided with the second anniversary of the declaration of the so-called Caliphate by the terror group as well as the last week of the holy month of Ramadan, during which IS called for increased attacks.

Many people caught in the blasts and near the airport posted photos and videos from the scene, showing the destruction caused by the explosions as well as people hiding in various places in search of safety.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan made a statement strongly condemning the attack.

Earlier, Reuters already reported that two suicide bombers blew themselves up in the airport by detonating explosives just before the security checkpoint at the international terminal.

According to eyewitness accounts cited by Reuters, one of the assailants “randomly opened fire” in the terminal prior to the blasts. Another witness said the initial two explosions were followed by a third one preceded by shooting.

“I saw how one terrorist accessed the airport, and he had an AK47 and shot civilians… Turkish police wanted to kill him, and after that I heard the bomb explosion,” Ahmed Furkan Gurtuna, who works as a traffic police officer at the airport and was at passport control at the moment of the attack, told RT.

Police reportedly responded with fire against some suspects at the international terminal entry point of the airport.

Ataturk Airport is Turkey’s biggest, and the third busiest in Europe after London’s Heathrow and Paris’s Charles de Gaulle. Its total passenger traffic was 61 million people in 2015.
 
I also think that this attack and Erdogans apology are connected. Maybe Erdogan find out that the western powers will not support him anymore .Also from economic aspect, a lot of Turkish hotels are empty because a lot of tourists were Russians. Then the ISIS is weaker and weaker every day and is losing territories every single day in Syria and Irak even with a big help from Turkey.
So, finding out that he cant expect the west to back him up he decided to apology to Russia and try to connect more with Russia. Because if Turkish economy starts to decline then his position will not be so stable in the future.

Also maybe Brexit means that he will have less friends now in the EU so his only alternative was returning to Russia, or build a better relationships with Russia.
So when his Western masters saw this they organised him this attack as a reminder to him that hi is not the one who is in charge.

This people who shoot and then blow up themselves are probably some mind programmed "zombies" as we have seen many times in similar situations.

I think that all this events are somehow connected.
 
US Empire/Israel can stage terror-attacks wherever they feel like and no state official will ever point them out as the true perpetrators. Not that Erdogan is motivated by justice and conscience anyhow, or any Western official. They just get in line and use the staged terror attacks for their own agenda.

Is the US pushing Erdogan to act in a certain way to invade Syria? He wouldn't dare, Erdogan even 'apologized' to Putin. The West already trew him under the bus. I wonder if he just a pawn to them they are willing to sarcfice.

There have been so many terror-attacks in Turkey recently. Just what exactly does the Empire want from Turkey?
 
fabric said:
Oxajil said:
Here's a video of one of the suicide bombers detonating his suicide vest after being shot by the police:

CCTV of Turkey attack: Moment Attaturk Airport bomber explodes himself after being shot (GRAPHIC)

I wonder if he really had a suicide vest. Around the 35 second mark it looks like the explosion starts off to the bottom left of the screen. I would have thought the epicentre would have been right where the guy dropped.

I don´t understand what the guys are talking about in the above video, but it somehow strikes me that right after the explosion had occurred, they just kept on talking as if nothing had occurred. Of course, I´m just judging from the tone of their voice.
 
Hürriyet Daily News
Terror shakes Istanbul hours after Turkey’s big diplomatic campaign to mend Russia, Israel ties
Ali Kayalar – ISTANBUL
_http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/terror-shakes-istanbul-hours-after-turkeys-big-diplomatic-campaign-to-mend-russia-israel-ties.aspx?pageID=238&nID=101038&NewsCatID=341
Another terror attack shook Turkey late on June 28, just as the country has launched a multifaceted diplomatic move to mend its broken ties with both Israel and Russia following major disputes.

At least 36 people were killed, according to Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yıldırım, in the attack on Istanbul Atatürk International Airport, the biggest in the country, by at least three militants.

Less than a day before the attack, Turkey and Israel inked a deal to normalize ties after six years of mutual distrust stemming from an Israeli commando raid on the Mavi Marmara aid flotilla in May 2010 that killed 10 pro-Palestinian Turkish activists who were attempting to breach Israel’s Gaza blockade. Officials from both countries said both sides would benefit from the deal.

President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan sent a letter to his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin, on June 27 to express his deep sorrow over the downing of a Russian warplane last year for violating Turkish airspace during operations in Syria. Russia responded positively to the efforts, and tour operators from both countries hailed the discussions which appear set to be bear fruit.

Moreover, also just a day before the attack, Prime Minister Binali Yıldırım announced that the country was ready to normalize ties with Egypt which deteriorated after a military coup staged by Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi in July 2013 against President Mohamad Morsi. The overthrow of the Muslim Brotherhood member drew strongly worded statements from Erdoğan, who was prime minister at the time.

Analysts have already started to compare the airport attack with several ones in the past year, including the deadliest one in the country’s history, the Ankara bombing carried out by Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) militants on Oct. 10, 2015, at a peace rally in the nation’s capital.

The timing of the June 28 bombing not only overlaps with Ankara’s diplomatic campaign to mend ties with the region’s other powers, but also some other major moves against the jihadist ISIL, which is a threat to the country’s borders.

A total of 36 suspects in the deadly ISIL bomb attack in Ankara last year are facing up to 11,750 years in jail, according to an indictment finalized by the Ankara Public Prosecutor’s Office on June 28.

The indictment listed ISIL militant Yunus Emre Alagöz and an unnamed Syrian militant as the suicide bombers who committed the attack. Alagöz’s brother, Abdurrahman Alagöz, committed an attack in Suruç in the southeastern province of Şanlıurfa on July 20, 2015, killing 33 young activists.

Turkey also recently changed its military rules of engagement to allow NATO allies to carry out more patrol flights along its border with northern Syria against ISIL, Reuters quoted a Turkish official as saying on June 28.

Analysts have not ruled out the possibility that such a large attack could also be carried out by the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), citing the recent military campaign against the outlawed group in several provinces in the southeast.

Regardless of the identity or goals of the terrorist group behind the airport attack, it leaves no room for doubt that the bombing targets Ankara’s peace efforts – if it is not a direct response to it.

June/29/2016

Caution with viewing TOI Site.
Very strong anti Malware protection recommended.

My Computer seems to go through gyrations and locks up a bit while viewing the this source.

TOI
6-29-16
All Israelis accounted for after Istanbul attack (Videos and Pic's)
Foreign Ministry says no Israelis hurt as suicide bombers wreak carnage at busy airport, killing at least 36 and wounding over 140
_http://www.timesofisrael.com/ten-israelis-unaccounted-for-after-istanbul-attack-thought-to-be-safe/
All Israelis in Turkey are accounted for and safe after Tuesday’s bloody attack on Istanbul’s Ataturk airport, the foreign ministry in Jerusalem said Wednesday morning.

The ministry had earlier Wednesday morning reported that 10 and then two Israelis had failed to make contact with authorities after the assault, which killed dozens and wounded more than 140 at the airport’s busy international terminal Tuesday night.

Turkish officials blamed the massacre at the international terminal on three suspected Islamic State group suicide bombers.

Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim said 36 were dead as well as the three suicide bombers. Justice Minister Bekir Bozdag said 147 were wounded.

Another senior government official told The Associated Press the death toll could climb much higher. The senior official, who spoke on condition of anonymity in line with government protocol, at first said close to 50 people had already died, but later said that the figure was expected to rise to close to 50.

Israeli diplomats who rushed to the hospital to which the victims were taken reported that no Israeli tourists were known to have been hurt in the attack. Earlier, in the immediate aftermath of the explosions, Israel’s Foreign Ministry said all its diplomats who were at the airport at the time of the blast were accounted for and unharmed.

On Wednesday morning, the ministry said it was continuing to search for possible Israeli victims affected by the attack, but later reported all had been accounted for.

A statement said no Israelis were hurt in the blast at the airport, a popular destination and transfer hub for Israelis traveling abroad.

It added that 130 Israelis were stuck at their airport, where they had been transferring on return trips from abroad, including 70 who arrived from Copenhagen and 30 from Chisinau, Moldova.

The blast came hours after Israel and Turkey inked a deal to restore full diplomatic ties after six years of rancor between the once-close allies.

Trade and tourism between the countries is expected to rise in the wake of the rapprochement agreement, though Istanbul’s tourist industry has been wracked by a series of suicide bombings that have killed over a dozen visitors, including Israelis.

Yildirim, speaking to reporters at the airport, said all initial indications suggested the Islamic State group was behind the attacks.

“The findings of our security forces point at the Daesh organization as the perpetrators of this terror attack,” Yildirim said, using the Arabic name for IS. “Even though the indications suggest Daesh, our investigations are continuing.”

Turkey shares long, porous borders with Syria and Iraq, war-torn countries where IS controls large pockets of territory. Authorities have blamed IS for several major bombings over the past year, including on the capital Ankara, as well as attacks on tourists in Istanbul.

Turkey has stepped up controls at airports and land borders and deported thousands of foreign fighters, but has struggled to tackle the threat of IS militants while also conducting vast security operations against Kurdish rebels, who have also been blamed for recent deadly attacks.

The devastation at Istanbul’s airport follows the March attack on Brussels Airport, where two suicide bombings ripped through check-in counters, killing 16 people. The Islamic State group claimed responsibility for that attack, as well as a subsequent explosion at a Brussels subway station that killed 16 more people.

Hundreds of frightened passengers streamed out of the airport, fleeing the latest of several bombings to strike Turkey in recent months. The attacks on a key partner in the US-led coalition against IS and a NATO member have increased in scale and frequency. They have scared off tourists and hurt the Turkish economy, which relies heavily on tourism.

Hevin Zini, 12, had just arrived from Duesseldorf, Germany, with her family and was in tears from the shock.

“There was blood on the ground,” she told The Associated Press. “Everything was blown up to bits… if we had arrived two minutes earlier, it could have been us.”

Yildirim said air traffic at Ataturk Airport, which was suspended after the attack, had resumed to normal early Wednesday. A stoppage of flights to and from the United States and Istanbul lasted several hours but was later lifted.

A flight from Tel Aviv to Istanbul scheduled for 8:40 a.m. was expected to leave on time, Israeli news site Ynet reported.

Yildirim said the attackers arrived at the airport in a taxi and blew themselves up after opening fire. Asked whether a fourth attacker might have escaped, he said authorities have no such assessment but are considering every possibility.

Another Turkish official said two of the attackers detonated explosives at the entrance of the international arrivals terminal after police fired at them, while the third blew himself up in the parking lot.

The official, who also spoke on condition of anonymity in line with government regulations, cited interior ministry information and said that none of the attackers managed to get past security checks at the terminal’s entrance.

Turkish airports have security checks at both the entrance of terminal buildings and then later before entry to departure gates.

Roads around the airport were sealed off for regular traffic after the attack and several ambulances could be seen driving back and forth. Passengers were left sitting on the grass outside the airport.

Surveillance footage purporting to be from the airport showed one blast from inside the international terminal.

South African Judy Favish, who spent two days in Istanbul as a layover on her way home from Dublin, had just checked in when she heard an explosion followed by gunfire and a loud bang.

She says she hid under the counter for some time.

Favish says passengers were ushered to a cafeteria at the basement level where they were kept for more than an hour before being allowed outside.

Two South African tourists, Paul and Susie Roos from Cape Town, were at the airport and due to fly home at the time of the explosions.

“We came up from the arrivals to the departures, up the escalator when we heard these shots going off,” Paul Roos said. “There was this guy going roaming around, he was dressed in black and he had a hand gun.

The prime minister called for national unity and “global cooperation” in combatting terrorism.

“This (attack) has shown once again that terrorism is a global threat,” Yildirim said. “This is a heinous planned attack that targeted innocent people.”

He suggested that the attack was linked to what he said was Turkey’s success against Kurdish rebels, as well as steps Ankara took Monday toward mending strained ties with Israel and Russia.

“It is meaningful that this heinous attack came at a time when we have become successful in the fight against separatist terrorism … and at a time when we started a process of normalizing ties with our neighbors,” Yildirim said.

Yildirim said there was no security lapse at the airport, but added the fact the attackers were carrying weapons “increased the severity” of the attack.

The victims included some foreigners, he said, adding that many of the wounded have minor injuries but others were more badly hurt.

Saudi Arabia’s Embassy in Turkey said at least seven Saudis were injured in the attack and all are in stable condition

The independent DHA news agency said the wounded, among them police officers, were transferred to Bakirkoy State Hospital.
Turkey is beset by a wide array of security threats, including from ultra-left radicals, Kurdish rebels demanding greater autonomy in the restive southeast, and IS militants.

On January 12, an attack that Turkish authorities blamed on IS claimed the lives of a dozen German tourists visiting Istanbul’s historic sites. On March 19, a suicide bombing rocked Istanbul’s main pedestrian street, killing five people, including the bomber, whom the authorities identified as a Turkish national linked to IS.

Last October, twin suicide bombings hit a peace rally outside Ankara’s train station, killing 102 people. There was no claim of responsibility but Turkish authorities blamed the attack on a local cell of IS.

Istanbul’s Ataturk Airport was the 11th busiest airport in the world last year, with 61.8 million passengers, according to Airports Council International. It is also one of the fastest-growing airports in the world, seeing 9.2 percent more passengers last year than in 2014.

The largest carrier at the airport is Turkish Airlines, which operates a major hub there. Low-cost Turkish carrier Onur Air is the second-largest airline there.

The independent Dogan news agency reported that a plane carrying Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama was arriving on an official visit at the airport when the attack occurred. The prime minister and his entourage were safely taken to an official residence.

Raphael Ahren contributed to this report.
 
hesperides said:
fabric said:
Oxajil said:
Here's a video of one of the suicide bombers detonating his suicide vest after being shot by the police:

CCTV of Turkey attack: Moment Attaturk Airport bomber explodes himself after being shot (GRAPHIC)

I wonder if he really had a suicide vest. Around the 35 second mark it looks like the explosion starts off to the bottom left of the screen. I would have thought the epicentre would have been right where the guy dropped.

I don´t understand what the guys are talking about in the above video, but it somehow strikes me that right after the explosion had occurred, they just kept on talking as if nothing had occurred. Of course, I´m just judging from the tone of their voice.

Well this appears to be a video of the CCTV video, so they're probably talking about the event but not while it was going on.

I slowed the video down to .25x and it does seem like the explosion starts a little farther down and to the left of the man, but then as the explosion retracts it ends up fizzling out about where the man was laying. So it could be just the effect the light of the explosion had on the camera?

I agree that this is really interesting timing considering Turkey was inching closer towards Russia. First the Brexit and now this? Seems the West is throwing everything it can at Russia in an attempt to keep it isolated.
 
A Jay said:
I agree that this is really interesting timing considering Turkey was inching closer towards Russia. First the Brexit and now this? Seems the West is throwing everything it can at Russia in an attempt to keep it isolated.

I was thinking the same thing, but it doesn't make a lot of sense. Turkey is inching closer to Russia, saying they're going to fight terrorism. So the Western Gladio B network stages an ISIS attack against them, after which Turkey says, "OK, now it's war, we're getting serious about fighting terrorism, Russia is already doing a great job, etc." It's not as if the West (or Turkey) really cares about Turkish civilians, so why even bother? It just gives Turkey the justification to get even closer with Russia. I think it's definitely possible, I just don't know how much sense it makes.
 
Or, perhaps, considering the overwhelming evidence of Turkey's cooperation with ISIS, and supporting them, they are just doing the old trick of making themselves look like a victim. "See, ISIS attacks us, too. Saying that we support them is ridiculous."
 
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