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Suspect held over Istanbul nightclub attack has confessed

The man believed to have killed 39 people on New Year's night at an Istanbul nightclub has confessed after Turkish police captured him in a massive operation, a local official said on Tuesday.
(FILES) This file handout photo released by the Turkish police and taken from Dogan News Agency on January 2, 2017 shows the main suspect in the Reina nightclub rampage one day after a gunman killed 39 people, including many foreigners, in an attack at an upmarket nightclub in Istanbul where revellers were celebrating the New Year. Turkish police late on January 16, 2017 caught the attacker who shot dead 39 people on New Year's night at an Istanbul nightclub, state-run TRT television reported. The alleged attacker was found along with his four-year-old son in an apartment in the Esenyurt district of Istanbul after a massive police operation, TRT reported. / AFP PHOTO / Dogan News Agency / Handout / - Turkey OUT /

(FILES) This file handout photo released by the Turkish police and taken from Dogan News Agency on January 2, 2017 shows the main suspect in the Reina nightclub rampage one day after a gunman killed 39 people, including many foreigners, in an attack at an upmarket nightclub in Istanbul where revellers were celebrating the New Year. Turkish police late on January 16, 2017 caught the attacker who shot dead 39 people on New Year’s night at an Istanbul nightclub, state-run TRT television reported. The alleged attacker was found along with his four-year-old son in an apartment in the Esenyurt district of Istanbul after a massive police operation, TRT reported. / AFP PHOTO / Dogan News Agency / Handout / – Turkey OUT /

The man believed to have killed 39 people on New Year’s night at an Istanbul nightclub has confessed after Turkish police captured him in a massive operation, a local official said on Tuesday.

“The terrorist confessed his crime,” Istanbul governor Vasip Sahin told reporters, identifying the suspect as Abdulgadir Masharipov born in Uzbekistan in 1983.

“He was trained in Afghanistan and can speak four languages. He’s a well-trained terrorist,” Sahin added.

The suspected mass killer was captured Monday in a police raid on an apartment in the Esenyurt district, which is on Istanbul’s European side.

Authorities have been hunting the attacker for over two weeks, following the bloodbath on the glitzy Reina nightclub on the shores of the Bosphorus. The Islamic State (IS) group claimed the attack.

One Iraqi man and three women from Egypt and Africa were also detained at the same apartment, alongside the alleged assailant, the governor said.

“It is clear that the attack was carried out on behalf of Daesh,” he said, using an Arabic acronym for the IS group, adding that the other four suspects were likely linked to the jihadists.

Turkish media initially reported the killer was captured with his four-year-old son, but the governor said the child was not present during the police raid.

Police confiscated $197,000 (185,000 euros), two weapons and clips at the apartment.

Some 2,000 police officers were involved in the operation backed by Turkish intelligence, according to the official. Police have raided approximately 152 addresses and detained 50 suspects, he said.

Sahin also said the suspected killer “illegally entered Turkey” from its eastern borders.

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