Briton Jacqueline Sutton, 50, was found hanged
Saturday in a restroom at the airport's international transit terminal,
Turkey's state-sponsored Anadolu news agency reported, citing Istanbul police.
Sutton, who once
worked for the United Nations and the BBC, flew from London to Istanbul to take
a connecting flight to her base in Irbil in the Kurdish region of northern
Iraq, according to her employer, the Institute for War and Peace Reporting.
Turkish media reported Sutton missed her flight
to Irbil.
Britain's Foreign and Commonwealth Office
confirmed the death of a British national in Turkey, saying embassy staff was
assisting the family of the deceased and that British officials would remain in
close contact with Turkish authorities.
Anadolu reported that Sutton hanged herself,
citing Turkish security officials. Turkish authorities have not responded to
CNN requests for comment.
'Don't
believe the reports'
News of Sutton's death caused an outpouring of
grief on Twitter, with friends and former colleagues expressing skepticism she
could have taken her own life and calling for a full investigation into her
death.
"Simply don't believe the news
reports," tweeted Jane Pearce, Iraq country director for the U.N. World
Food Program, describing Sutton as a friend.
Sudipto Mukerjee, a former colleague of
Sutton's from the U.N. Development Program, tweeted that he found it "very
difficult" to believe the reports of suicide.
Charlie Winter, a senior researcher at
London-based counter-extremism organization Quilliam, wrote that he did not
"for 1 second believe" that Sutton had taken her own life. "When
we met on Monday she was engaging, driven; seemed anything but suicidal,"
he tweeted.
The Melbourne, Australia-based International
Women's Development Agency tweeted it would "be seeking answers and
calling for urgent action" over Sutton's death.
John MacLeod, managing editor
of the London-based Institute for War and Peace Reporting, told CNN that
Sutton's employer was sending staff to Turkey to seek answers from officials.
MacLeod said he did not know what to think of
suggestions her death could be attributed to something other than suicide.
"We don't honestly know," he said.
"Obviously the circumstances are unclear. ... We will be looking to ask
for a thorough investigation."
Group's
second Iraq country director to die
Sutton was appointed the
organization's acting country director in Iraq in June, replacing Ammar Al
Shahbander, who died in a May car bomb attack in Baghdad. She had been in
London last week to attend a memorial service for Al Shahbander, the institute said.
The organization added in a statement that
Sutton "was returning to Iraq full of plans for innovative new work,
including projects to counter violent extremism that threatens a country to
which she was so committed."
"Jacky was one of the top development
professionals working on Iraq, and she devoted nearly 10 years of her life to
helping the country," said Anthony Borden, the institute's executive
director.
"She was extremely bright, highly
competent, and well able to handle herself in difficult environments, and she
was universally loved. We are in total shock."
Sutton spoke five languages, including Arabic,
and had extensive experience in media and development fields, having worked for
the BBC in Africa, the Middle East and the United Kingdom, and in senior roles
for the United Nations from Afghanistan and Iran to Gaza and West Africa.
She had recently been pursuing a doctorate on
the position of female journalists in Iraq and Afghanistan, studying at the
Center for Arab and Islamic Studies at the Australian National University in
Canberra, the Institute for War and Peace Reporting said.
Journalist Isil
Sariyuce contributed to this report.
A former journalist was found hanged in a
bathroom in the Turkish airport. According to those who have met this
journalist in person say there is no way she would have committed suicide and
therefore it's probably a murder. I think the author of this article is biased
towards that too because they keep emphasizing the words of those that say she
seemed anything but suicidal the last time they talked to her and that they
refuse to believe that she's really dead. I agree with the author of the
article when they say that this case needs more investigation to find out what
really happened. I think countries like Turkey where there have been many cases
and issues in the past should really take more caution so that people don't get
killed like this journalist again.
Hume,
Tim. "Grief, disbelief after former U.N. official found dead in Turkish
airport." 20 Oct. 2015. CNN News.
20 Oct. 2015. <http://edition.cnn.com/2015/10/20/europe/turkey-death-jacky-sutton/index.html>
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