Tunisian killed in Istanbul attack seeking IS-linked son

A mother of victims reacts outside a forensic medicine building close to Istanbul's airport on June 29, 2016, a day after a suicide bombing and gun attack targetted Istanbul's airport, killing at least 36 people. A triple suicide bombing and gun attack that occurred on June 28, 2016 at Istanbul's Ataturk airport has killed at least 36 people, including foreigners, with Turkey's prime minister saying early signs pointed to an assault by the Islamic State group. / AFP PHOTO / BULENT KILIC
A mother of victims reacts outside a forensic medicine building close to Istanbul’s airport on June 29, 2016, a day after a suicide bombing and gun attack targetted Istanbul’s airport, killing at least 36 people.
A triple suicide bombing and gun attack that occurred on June 28, 2016 at Istanbul’s Ataturk airport has killed at least 36 people, including foreigners, with Turkey’s prime minister saying early signs pointed to an assault by the Islamic State group. / AFP PHOTO /

TUNIS , Tunisia (AFP) — A Tunisian killed in the Istanbul airport attack blamed on the Islamic State group was in Turkey to secure the release of his son detained for joining the jihadists, diplomats said Wednesday.

Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim quickly pointed the finger at IS over Tuesday’s attack, which killed at least 41 people and wounded 239, although no group has claimed responsibility.

One of the dead was a Tunisian identified as Fathi Bayoudh, a doctor who had reportedly been in Turkey for several weeks in an attempt to repatriate his son.

Bayoudh’s son was accused of having joined IS in Syria, a foreign ministry source was quoted as saying by Tunisia’s private Mosaique FM radio station.

After months of travelling back and forth between Tunisia and Turkey, Bayoudh had finally managed to persuade his son to return home with him, an anonymous government source told AFP.

A defence ministry source in Tunis said Bayoudh was at Ataturk Airport to meet his wife when the triple suicide attack struck.

The head of consular affairs at Tunis’ foreign ministry, Faycal Ben Mustapha, told AFP the Tunisian consulate in Istanbul had been in contact “with the Bayoudh family since December”.

“It was to do with their son. We don’t know exactly what he did, but he went to Iraq and then Syria and ended up in detention in Turkey,” he said.

A defense ministry spokesman confirmed a Tunisian who was in Turkey on private business had been killed in Tuesday’s attack.

The Islamic State group has carried out a string of bomb attacks across Turkey since last year.

Tunisia has also been the victim of attacks claimed by IS, and it is thought that thousands of Tunisians have travelled to join jihadist organisations in Syria, Iraq, and neighboring Libya.

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