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Russian ambassador to Turkey killed in shooting, foreign ministry says

[Update:] Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said the assassination of Russia’s ambassador to Turkey won’t dampen the two countries’ effor...
Russia’s ambassador to Turkey shot in Ankara, state media reports

[Update:]

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said the assassination of Russia’s ambassador to Turkey won’t dampen the two countries’ efforts to build a stronger relationship. “We know that this is a provocation on destroying the relationship between Turkey and Russia during this normalization process. … All the expectation of what they want to achieve with this attack will be in vain and never happen,” Erdogan said in televised remarks Monday.

[Update:]

Russian President Vladimir Putin called the assassination of his country’s ambassador to Turkey a “provocation,” vowing to step up security at diplomatic missions. “This murder is a clearly a provocation aimed at undermining the normalization of Russia-Turkish relations as well as at undermining the peace process in Syria promoted by Russia, Turkey, Iran and other countries interested in promoting settling the crisis in Syria,” Putin said in televised remarks. “The only response we should offer to this murder is stepping up our fight against terror, and the criminals will feel the heat.”

[Update:]

Mevlut Mert Altintas, an off-duty police officer, was the gunman who assassinated the Russian ambassador to Turkey on Monday, Turkish Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu said in a press conference. The attacker was born in 1994 in the town of Soke in Turkey’s Aydin province, he said. Turkey’s official Anadolu news agency reported that the gunman has been neutralized. But it was not immediately clear whether the attacker was killed or captured by police.

[Update:]

Andrey Karlov, Russia’s ambassador to Turkey, was killed in a shooting in Ankara on Monday, a spokeswoman for Russia’s foreign ministry announced on Russian television.

 

Russia’s ambassador to Turkey, Andrey Karlov, was seriously wounded in a shooting Monday at an art exhibition in Ankara, Turkey’s official Anadolu news agency reported.

Karlov was giving a speech at the opening ceremony of a photo exhibit when an assailant opened fire, the news agency said.

Images of the scene showed a body on the ground as a man with a pistol stood nearby.

In a caption, The Associated Press news agency described the man with the gun as the attacker. CNN has not independently confirmed the identities of the people in the photograph.

Authorities haven’t said who they believe was responsible for the attack. Anadolu reported that the gunman had been neutralized. But it was not immediately clear whether the attacker was killed or captured by police.

Police cars quickly swarmed the scene after the shooting.

The attack occurred at the Cagdas Sanat Merkezi modern arts center in Ankara.

The ambassador began his diplomatic career in 1976 and has been the envoy to Turkey since 2013, according to a profile on the website for the Russian Embassy in Ankara.

A series of attacks
The shooting of the ambassador is the latest in a long string of attacks in Turkey this year, although it’s the first in recent memory to be directed at a foreign dignitary.

A car bomb exploded near a public bus in the central province of Kayserion Saturday, killing 13 soldiers and wounding 55 people, according to Turkish officials.

The attack came exactly a week after a pair of bombings in Istanbul killed 44 people, including 37 police officers, and injured 155 others. The explosions, which occurred after a heavily attended soccer game at Besiktas Vodafone Arena, were claimed by a Kurdish militant group called the Kurdish Freedom Hawks.

Turkish-Russian relations were improving
The attack comes at a time of improving relations between Turkey and Russia — relations that hit an all-time low after Turkish forces shot a Russian warplane out of the sky near the Syrian border in November 2015.

Russia had slapped a raft of sanctions on Turkey in the wake of the deadly jet incident, hurting Turkish exports and damaging its tourism industry.

But the relationship began to thaw in June, when Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan wrote a letter expressing “regret” to the family of the pilot who was killed in the shootdown.

When Erdogan faced down an attempted military coup in July, Russian President Vladimir Putin was among the first world leaders to call and offer his support.

Erdogan and Putin have spoken several times on the phone in recent weeks as they worked to hammer out a deal to evacuate civilians from rebel-held eastern Aleppo in Syria.

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