Turkey helped UAE to arrest suspects accused of killing Israeli rabbi

The UAE foreign ministry said that Turkish authorities assisted in the arrest of the suspects accused of murdering an Israeli rabbi. The three suspects were caught in Istanbul in a secret operation at the weekend by Turkish intelligence and police according to a Turkish security source.

People stand next to the coffin of Israeli rabbi, Zvi Kogan, who was found murdered in the UAE, during his funeral, in Kfar Habad, Israel, Nov. 25, 2024. REUTERS/Stoyan Nenov

Reuters

The United Arab Emirates foreign ministry announced on Nov. 26 that Turkish authorities assisted in the arrest of the suspects accused of murdering an Israeli rabbi in the UAE.

In a statement carried by the state news agency, the ministry thanked Turkish authorities for "their cooperation in arresting the perpetrators", without providing further details.

Emirati authorities have said they arrested three Uzbek men for the suspected murder of Zvi Kogan, a 28-year-old rabbi who had been living in the UAE and was also a Moldovan national.

The three suspects were caught in Istanbul in a secret operation at the weekend by Turkish intelligence and police, acting on a UAE government request, a Turkish security source said.

Turkish intelligence found out which flight the suspects arrived in Istanbul on, and Turkish police caught them after they left the airport, the source added.

Turkey extradited the suspects to the UAE, the source also said.

The circumstances of Kogan's death have not been disclosed and it is unclear if Emirati authorities have established a motive or where the three suspects were when they were arrested.

Israeli officials have said Kogan was targeted because he was Jewish and characterised his killing as an antisemitic attack. Israeli agencies are assisting the investigation.

Kogan had been living in the UAE for several years and had been involved in outreach to the country's Jewish community. He was reported missing on Thursday and his body was discovered on Sunday.

Uzbek officials have said the Tashkent government was assisting Emirati and Israeli authorities in the investigation.

Two of the detained suspects are aged 28 and a third is 33. The three suspects have been shown blindfolded and in restraints in images released by the UAE ministry of interior.