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Turkey detains 10 suspects over Istanbul gun attack outside Israeli consulate, media reports

Turkey detains 10 suspects over Istanbul gun attack outside Israeli consulate, media reports

ReutersWed, April 8, 2026 at 9:25 AM UTC

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Police officers walk near the scene, after a gunfire was heard near the building housing the Israeli consulate, according to a witness, in Istanbul, Turkey, April 7, 2026. REUTERS/Umit Bektas

ISTANBUL, April 8 (Reuters) - Turkish authorities have detained 10 people in connection with Tuesday's gun attack near the Israeli ‌consulate in Istanbul as the investigation widened, Turkish media ‌reported on Wednesday.

One attacker was killed and two others were wounded in the ​extended gun battle with police outside the tower building in Istanbul's main financial district that houses the consulate.

Those detained include the two wounded assailants, who are being questioned in hospital as they undergo ‌treatment, state-owned news ⁠agency Anadolu reported. The remaining eight suspects were arrested in operations in Istanbul and the nearby province ⁠of Kocaeli following the attack, it reported.

The interior ministry declined to comment on the detentions, while Istanbul police and the prosecutor's office ​could not ​immediately be reached for comment.

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Authorities ​have not detailed a motive ‌for the assault, and the investigation is ongoing. U.S. Ambassador to Turkey Tom Barrack in a post on X called it an attack on the Israeli consulate and condemned it.

Interior Minister Mustafa Ciftci has said the three attackers had links to a group ‌that “exploits religion” without specifying further. Two ​of them were brothers, who had travelled ​in a rented car ​from the city of Izmit, he added.

The attacker ‌killed at the scene was identified ​as Yunus Emre ​Sarban, according to an interior ministry source.

Sarban had previously been linked to financial networks with ties to the Islamic ​State militant group, ‌leading to his assets being frozen in 2021, according to ​the government's Official Gazette.

(Reporting by Ece Toksabay; Editing by ​Daren Butler and Joe Bavier)

Original Article on Source

Source: “AOL General News”

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