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Turkey Police Arrest 11 over U.S. Woman's Murder

Turkish police have arrested 11 people over the murder of an American woman who disappeared while visiting Istanbul last month, police and the local media reported Sunday.

The body of 33-year-old Sarai Sierra, a mother of two, was found on Saturday near Istanbul's ancient city walls with fatal head wounds, the Radikal daily reported.

"We have confirmed that she was murdered by way of impacts on her head," Istanbul police chief Huseyin Capkin told reporters on Sunday. "But we need to conclude the investigation before details emerge."

The Milliyet newspaper said she was also stabbed several times in her abdomen, but there was no sign of rape or theft and she was still wearing jewelry when police found her.

Turkish police had been searching for Sierra after her family reported that they had lost touch with her on January 21, the day she was due to return home to New York.

The Hurriyet newspaper, along with other media outlets, reported that Istanbul police have arrested 11 suspects but gave no further details.

Sierra's body might have been dumped in a blanket on Tuesday night on the main road near the ancient walls, Hurriyet reported, citing a possible eye witness.

"I saw a man removing something from the back seat of a car," the woman was quoted as telling the police. "Then I saw a hand there."

Sierra, who has two children aged nine and 11, left the United States for Istanbul on January 7. She had posted a picture on Instagram on January 20, the day before she went missing.

Police initially detained a Turkish man named Taylan K., who is believed to be the last person to see Sierra before she went missing, but released him after questioning, according to local reports.

"We met four months ago on Instagram as we commented on each other's pictures," Taylan K. was quoted as telling the police by the Vatan newspaper.

The two met on January 13 and 20, but a third meeting scheduled for the day Sierra went missing never happened, according to his testimony.

Hurriyet speculated that Sierra might have been tricked into trying to smuggle drugs into the United States, citing an anonymous retired U.S. agent from the Drug Enforcement Administration.

But Capkin said there was no indication that she was involved in such a scheme. "She was a lonely wanderer," he said.

Istanbul is Turkey's largest city, home to at least 15 million people and considered a relatively safe travel destination which is visited by millions of tourists every year.

Source: Agence France Presse


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