Istanbul bombing organizer possibly killed in Georgia

Georgian armed counter-terrorist units move around an apartment block in Tbilisi on November 22, 2017, as part of a special operation. Explosions and gunfire were heard in the Georgian capital on, as armed counter-terrorist units raided a multi-storey apartment block on the outskirts of the city. Georgia's state security service said that unspecified suspects opened fire on its counter-terrorist units that were conducting a special operation on the outskirts of Tbilisi. (AFP)

TBILISI, Georgia: A Chechen warlord suspected of organizing the 2016 suicide bombing at Istanbul鈥檚 airport may be among those killed last week during a counter-terror operation in Tbilisi, Georgia said Monday.
鈥淲e suspect that maybe it鈥檚 (Akhmed) Chatayev,鈥� the spokeswoman for Georgia鈥檚 security service, Nino Giorgobiani, told AFP.
Media reports had already suggested that the one-armed leader of an Daesh group cell in Istanbul was killed during Wednesday鈥檚 operation on the outskirts of the Georgian capital.
鈥淲e can only give a definitive answer after experts conclude their work,鈥� Giorgobiani said, adding that 鈥渢he relevant United States agencies joined in with the investigation.鈥�
Authorities said one suspected member of a 鈥渢errorist group鈥� was arrested and three more were killed on Wednesday during the operation in Tbilisi鈥檚 suburban Isani district.
Georgia鈥檚 security service has said it was working to identify the group, with the help of international counter-terrorism organizations.
In an earlier statement, Giorgobiani said that the three men 鈥渞efused to surrender, opened fire with automatic rifles and threw hand grenades at counter-terrorist units,鈥� killing one serviceman and wounding four others.
Turkish media have identified Chatayev as the organizer of the June 2016 triple suicide bombing at Istanbul鈥檚 main airport in which forty-seven people were killed and 200 wounded.
Forty-six suspects went on trial in connection with the case earlier this month. The three bombers are believed to be from Russia, Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan and entered Turkey from Syria鈥檚 Raqqa, IS鈥檚 de-facto capital at the time.
Chatayev, who reportedly found accommodation for the bombers, was in 2015 put on a terror blacklist by the US Treasury and the UN Security Council for his allegiance to IS and Al-Qaeda.
Georgia has no recent history of major terror attacks.
Some 50 Georgians are believed to be fighting alongside IS extremists in Syria and Iraq, officials have said.
Most are ethnic Chechen Muslim minority residents of the Pankisi valley in the country鈥檚 northeast, which has developed a reputation as a jihadist hotbed.