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Istanbul nightclub suspect 'received orders from Islamic State'

The man suspected of killing 39 people at an Istanbul nightclub on New Year`s Eve has claimed he received the order to attack from Islamic State jihadists in Syria, local media reported Wednesday.

Istanbul nightclub suspect 'received orders from Islamic State'

Ankara: The man suspected of killing 39 people at an Istanbul nightclub on New Year`s Eve has claimed he received the order to attack from Islamic State jihadists in Syria, local media reported Wednesday.

Turkish authorities on Monday detained Abdulgadir Masharipov, 34, who spent 17 days on the run following the attack which was claimed by the extremist group. They also arrested an Iraqi man and three women from Egypt, Senegal and Somalia.

Officials identified him as an Uzbek national who trained in Afghanistan, saying he confessed to carrying out the attack and that his fingerprints matched those of the attacker at the scene.

Using the code name Ebu Muhammed Horasani, the man told police he entered Turkey through Iran in January 2016 and moved to the central city of Konya, the Hurriyet newspaper reported.

"When I was in Konya, an order came from (the Syrian city of) Raqa for me to carry out an attack in Taksim" Square in Istanbul, he said in testimony to Turkish police. Raqa is the self-declared capital of IS in Syria.

He moved to Istanbul on December 16 and scouted out the popular square to locate a suitable place to attack. 

"I arrived at Taksim on New Year`s Eve but there were very intensive (security) measures. It was not possible to carry out an attack," he said. 

"I re-established contact with the person who gave me the order and we agreed that Taksim was not suitable for an attack. I was ordered to scout a new target in the area."Images initially released by police during the manhunt were taken from a chilling silent video he purportedly took in the square with a selfie stick, before carrying out the bloodbath.

The suspect said he later took a taxi for a tour along the shores of the Bosphorus at around 1900 GMT when he spotted the Reina nightclub.

"It didn`t look like security measures were high. 

"I explained the situation to the person who gave me the order and told him that Reina was suitable. He agreed and asked me to carry out the attack at Reina," the man told police, according to Hurriyet.

After getting the green light from an unnamed IS jihadist in Syria, the suspect said he took a taxi to Istanbul`s Zeytinburnu neighbourhood, picked up the weapon from home and came back to attack the club.

The carnage at the elite club, just 75 minutes into 2017, shook Turkey which had already been on edge after a string of attacks in 2016 blamed on Kurdish militants and jihadists.

 

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