Trial opens for Istanbul New Year massacre gunman

Uzbek citizen Abdulkadir Masharipov faces 40 life sentences for the deadly nightclub shooting in which 19-year-old Israeli Lian Zaher Nasser was killed

First aid officers carry an injured woman at the site of an armed attack on January 1, 2017 in Istanbul, Turkey. (AFP PHOTO / IHLAS NEWS AGENCY / IHLAS NEWS AGENCY)
First aid officers carry an injured woman at the site of an armed attack on January 1, 2017 in Istanbul, Turkey. (AFP PHOTO / IHLAS NEWS AGENCY / IHLAS NEWS AGENCY)

An Uzbek citizen who confessed to killing 39 people, including one Israeli citizen, at an Istanbul nightclub in a New Year gun attack claimed by the Islamic State extremist group, was set to go on trial in Istanbul on Monday.

Abdulkadir Masharipov faces 40 life sentences, one for each of the victims and the massacre itself, when the trial gets underway at the Silivri prison complex outside the center of Istanbul.

Of the 39 killed in the Reina attack, 27 were foreigners including citizens from Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, Iraq and Morocco who had gone to the club to celebrate New Year. According to the indictment, 79 people were wounded.

Lian Zaher Nasser of Tira, killed in a shooting attack at an Istanbul nightclub on January 1, 2017 (Courtesy)

One of the victims was 19-year-old Lian Zaher Nasser, from the Arab-Israeli town of Tira.

Her friend Ro’a Mansour, 18, was wounded in the attack.

A total of 57 suspects are due to go on trial, including Masharipov’s wife, Zarina Nurullayeva, who is a suspected accomplice and risks similar penalties to her husband. All but six are being held in custody.

Masharipov was captured alive in a massive police operation and analysts say his evidence in confessions have helped Turkish authorities break up the elaborate network of jihadist cells in the city.

He is facing charges ranging from “attempting to destroy constitutional order”, “membership of an armed terrorist organisation,” to “murdering more than one person.”

‘Russian extremist gave orders’

After taking a taxi to the elite waterside Reina nightclub on the shores of the Bosphorus, Masharipov shot dead the security guard before marching inside and firing indiscriminately with his AK-47 at the terrified revelers and setting off grenades.

With survivors even jumping into the Bosphorus in panic, Masharipov, 34 at the time of the attack, slipped away from the scene as he merged into the crowds, triggering fears he could strike again.

Young people leave from the scene of an attack in Istanbul, early January 1, 2017. (AP/Halit Onur Sandal)

Nasser and Mansour were at the club together with two other Israeli women, Dr. Ala’a Abdulahi, 27, and Ayia Ihsan Abdulahi, all from the city of Tira in central Israel.

The IS extremist group, which at the time controlled swathes of Turkey’s neighbors Iraq and Syria, later claimed the attack. It remains the only time it has issued an unequivocal claim for an attack in Turkey.

Reina club shooter Abdulgadir Masharipov after being caught by Turkish police in Istanbul, late Monday, Jan. 16, 2017. (Depo Photos via AP)

However, after a 17-day manhunt that involved 2,000 police who watched 7,200 hours of video footage, the Turkish authorities detained Masharipov in the residential Istanbul neighborhood of Esenyurt.

Turkish authorities said Masharipov trained in Afghanistan and he confessed to carrying out the attack after receiving orders from the headquarters of IS in the Syrian city of Raqa.

According to the indictment, the order for the attack was given by a senior Russian Syria-based IS extremist named Islam Atabiev — codenamed Abu Jihad.

Uzbeks implicated in attacks

Masharipov, who used the IS codename Abu Mohammed Horasani, was just one of several nationals of the ex-Soviet state of Uzbekistan implicated in jihadist attacks this year.

An Uzbek man in October used a truck to mow people down on a New York street, ultimately killing eight according to terror charges. An Uzbek national was arrested after a truck attack in Stockholm in April that killed four people.

The overwhelmingly Muslim Central Asian state was ruled since independence under the tight secular regime of Islam Karimov, who clamped down on Islamist dissent and died in September 2016.

In this file photo taken on Friday, July 10, 2015, Uzbekistan’s President Islam Karimov gestures at the Shanghai Cooperation Organization summit in Ufa, Russia. (AP/Ivan Sekretarev)

The majority of the other suspects on trial are also foreigners, including Uighur Chinese and other nationals of Central Asian states.

Turkey was in 2016 battered by repeated attacks by jihadist and Kurdish extremists. However, there has been no further large-scale attack comparable to the Reina atrocity since.

Istanbul and Ankara remain under the tightest security and the authorities repeatedly claim that major plots have been foiled and hundreds of jihadist suspects detained.

One day after a gunman killed 39 people, including many foreigners, in a rampage at the upmarket Reina nightclub where revellers were celebrating the New Year people walk by the venue, in Istanbul, on January 2, 2017. (AFP/YASIN AKGUL)

Badly damaged in the attack, the Reina nightclub, once the haunt of Istanbul football stars and soap opera icons, was demolished in May on the grounds it had violated local construction legislation.

Turkey under President Recep Tayyip Erdogan had been accused by its Western allies of not doing enough to halt the rise of IS.

But the charges are denied by the Turkish authorities, who note the group has been listed as a terror organisation in the country since 2013.

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