36 dead, 147 injured in Istanbul's airport suicide attacks
Passengers leave Istanbul Ataturk, Turkey's largest airport, after a suicide bomb attack.
Three
suspected Islamic State group suicide bombers targeted the
international terminal of Istanbul's Ataturk airport, killing at least
36 people and wounding many others, Turkish officials said.
A relative of the Ataturk Airport suicide bomb attack victim waits outside Bakirkoy Sadi Konuk Hospital as she cries.
Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim said 36 were dead and 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.
A policeman gestures in front of an ambulance at Istanbul Ataturk airport, Turkey, following a blast.
Yildirim said three suicide bombers were responsible for the attack
and all initial indications suggest the Islamic State group was behind
it.
He 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.
The victims included some foreigners, he said, adding that many of
the wounded have minor injuries but others are more badly hurt.
Paramedics help a man in a wheelchair at Turkey's largest airport, Istanbul Ataturk, Turkey.
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 protocol and cited interior ministry information, said none
of the attackers managed to get past security checks at the terminal's
entrance.
Officials walk inside Istanbul Ataturk, Turkey.
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.
Hundreds of passengers were flooding out of the airport and others were
sitting on the grass. Hevin Zini, 12, had just arrived from Duesseldorf,
Germany, with her family and was in tears from the shock.
Paramedics push a stretcher at Istanbul Ataturk, Turkey.
"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."
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.
Armed security walks at Istanbul Ataturk, Turkey.
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.
The private DHA news agency said the wounded, among them police officers, were being transferred to BakirkoyStateHospital.
Turkey has suffered several bombings in recent months linked to Kurdish or Islamic State group militants.
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