Türkiye Arrests ISIS Members, Including Foreigners, in 2 Security Operations 

Police forensic experts examine the area after a shooting outside the Caglayan courthouse in Istanbul, Türkiye February 6, 2024. (Reuters)
Police forensic experts examine the area after a shooting outside the Caglayan courthouse in Istanbul, Türkiye February 6, 2024. (Reuters)
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Türkiye Arrests ISIS Members, Including Foreigners, in 2 Security Operations 

Police forensic experts examine the area after a shooting outside the Caglayan courthouse in Istanbul, Türkiye February 6, 2024. (Reuters)
Police forensic experts examine the area after a shooting outside the Caglayan courthouse in Istanbul, Türkiye February 6, 2024. (Reuters)

Turkish counter-terrorism forces arrested 30 ISIS members during security operations in Istanbul, the southern Hatay province and several other areas.

The operations are part of Ankara’s ongoing efforts to curb the activities of the terror group, most notably in wake an the attack on an Istanbul church early this month that left one Turkish national dead.

Counter-terrorism forces in Istanbul arrested on Tuesday 18 ISIS members out of 19 wanted persons identified by the Anti-Terrorism and Organized Crime Office. The manhunt for the last member is still ongoing.

On Monday, Turkish Interior Minister Ali Yerlikaya said police detained at least 12 suspected ISIS members in Istanbul and Hatay.

Five suspects were foreign nationals, he said, without specifying their nationalities.

Yerlikaya stressed that the security services will firmly deal with the terrorists and will continue their efforts to combat terrorism.

Authorities have detained 147 people suspected of having ties to ISIS in operations across 33 provinces.

Last month, ISIS renewed its activities in the country after a pause of seven years. Early in February, one Turkish citizen was killed by two ISIS gunmen at the Italian Santa Maria Catholic Church in Istanbul.

Authorities have already announced the arrest of 25 suspects in connection with the shooting.

Among the 25 remanded in custody were the two suspected gunmen, previously captured by police, who are believed to be tied to ISIS. The first one is Amirjon Khliqov from Tajikistan and the other David Tanduev from Russia.

They were charged with being members of an illegal organization and aggravated intentional homicide. Another nine suspects were released pending trial.

Türkiye has also detained 17 members of the ISIS Khorasan Province in an operation in Istanbul. Investigations revealed that they were involved in the attack on the Santa Maria Catholic Church, and of planning to establish a cell to train ISIS fighters and send them to Middle Eastern countries.



Iran’s President Criticizes US, West for Supporting Israel, Vows More ‘Severe Responses’

Smoke billows following an explosion in central Tehran on June 15, 2025. (AFP)
Smoke billows following an explosion in central Tehran on June 15, 2025. (AFP)
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Iran’s President Criticizes US, West for Supporting Israel, Vows More ‘Severe Responses’

Smoke billows following an explosion in central Tehran on June 15, 2025. (AFP)
Smoke billows following an explosion in central Tehran on June 15, 2025. (AFP)

Iran’s President Masoud Pezeshkian criticized the United States and some Western countries for supporting Israel's attacks on Iran.

He said that if Israeli attacks continue, Iran's responses "will be more decisive and severe.”

Pezeshkian said that Israel "is not capable of any action without the permission of the US” and that “what we are witnessing today is being done with the direct support of Washington.”

In a report carried on state TV, Pezeshkian said that Iran has never sought war and conflict. “However, just as our armed forces, including the powerful army and Revolutionary Guard, have so far provided appropriate and firm responses, in case of continued hostile actions, the responses will be more decisive and severe.”

Israeli strikes in Iran have killed at least 406 people and wounded another 654, a human rights group said Sunday.

The Washington-based group Human Rights Activists said its figures covered the entirety of Iran.

Iran’s government has not offered any overall casualty figures from Israeli attacks that have decimated its military leadership and targeted its nuclear sites. Individual officials have offered piecemeal figures.

Iran on Sunday said an Israeli strike that killed the head of the Revolutionary Guard’s missile program also took out seven of his trusted deputies, seriously disrupting its command.

Iran previously acknowledged the death of Gen. Amir Ali Hajizadeh, the head of the Guard’s aerospace division in Friday's strike.

Also killed were Gen. Mahmoud Bagheri, Gen. Davoud Sheikhian, Gen. Mohammad Bagher Taherpour, Gen. Mansour Safarpour, Gen. Masoud Tayyeb, Gen. Khosro Hasani and Gen. Javad Jarsara, the Guard said Sunday.

The Guard did not elaborate on why the men had gathered in one place.