The bombing took place on İstiklal Avenue, a shopping area popular with tourists and considered the busiest avenue in Turkey. However, the bombing took place at a time when the avenue was relatively quiet. Nails and small pieces of metal were reportedly scattered in the area due to the attack. Another account from a Turkish official (cited by
Reuters) states the bomber was "deterred" from his or her actual target by the police and set off the bomb "out of fear". Initial findings pointed to Kurdish perpetrators.
Victims Two of the killed victims were American-Israeli citizens, one was Israeli and one was Iranian. The Başaran family from
Adana was among those injured in the blast. The family of four had come to Istanbul as tourists and were shopping and sightseeing in the Istiklal Avenue when the blast occurred. 2.5-year-old Asya Başaran was hit by a metal fragment in the head, whilst her mother, Çilem Başaran, was hit in the shoulder and the groin. They were both life-threateningly injured.
Perpetrator While the authorities were quick to blame the
Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) given the
Ankara bombing in February, According to
Milliyet, Turkish authorities never ruled out ISIL as suspects early on. According to the newspaper, the fact that the attack occurred near a group of tourists indeed suggested an ISIL involvement. PKK umbrella organization
KCK said it opposed targeting civilians and condemned attacks on them. The next day, Turkish authorities announced that Mehmet Öztürk was reliably identified by DNA tests to be the suicide bomber of the Istanbul attack. Born 1992 in
Gaziantep Province and thought to be affiliated with ISIL, he was one of two Turkish suspects the authorities were investigating. The day before,
Sabah had named Özturk and 33-year-old ISIL militant Savaş Yıldız from
Adana, who is also thought to be involved in the
October 2015 Ankara bombings killing more than 100 civilians. In the night, authorities arrested Yıldız' parents, but they were released later. Öztürk had reportedly left his house in Gaziantep in 2013, and he was linked to ISIL by authorities after he was reported missing. He had reportedly visited his family one month before the attack. On 18 March, he bought a bus ticket to Istanbul from
Adıyaman and arrived in Istanbul on the day of the attack in a bus he took from Adıyaman. == See also ==