Former
BBC journalist Jacky Sutton
|
Jacky Sutton, a British
BBC journalist and acting director for the Institute for War and Peace
Reporting (IWPR), has been found dead at Istanbul’s Ataturk Airport after
missing a connecting flight to Iraq. Sutton, 50, was found
hanged in a toilet cubicle in the early hours of Sunday morning after missing
her connecting flight from Istanbul to Erbil, Iraq, which departed at 12:15am.
According
to airport staff, Sutton appeared distressed when she was told she had to buy
another ticket.
She
was found dead a few hours later.
RT report continues:
The
full circumstances of her death remain unknown, but friends and colleagues
insist she must have been murdered.
‘Someone killed
Jacky’
Iraqi
journalist Mazin Elias, who has previously worked with Sutton, said it is
highly unlikely she committed suicide, alleging “someone killed Jacky.”
“She
continued in Iraq – everything was difficult, everything was a challenge, but
she still continued,” he told the Mail Online.
“But,
what I’m sure about, the kind of person that Jacky was, it’s impossible she
would have killed herself, impossible.
“She’s
really looking for a better life for everyone. So kill herself? That’s crazy.
“I’m
really sad and sorry what happened, but if someone tells me ‘she killed
herself,’ I tell him: ‘No, that’s wrong, someone killed Jacky.’”
Another
of Sutton’s former colleagues, Rebecca Cooke, has called for an investigation
into her death.
“Shocking
and sad news about the death of Jacky Sutton in Istanbul. An international, not
just local, investigation is needed,” she told the Press Association.
Sutton’s
friend Christian Bluer also expressed his doubts on Twitter.
“I’m
not into conspiracies, but if the Turks say a security camera at
Istanbul-Ataturk was malfunctioning then Jacky Sutton was murdered,” he
tweeted.
‘Deeply saddened’
Sutton
had also been studying for a PhD at the Centre for Arab and Islamic Studies at
the Australian National University.
Her
former professor Amin Saikal said he is “deeply saddened” by the news.
“We
are deeply saddened and shocked by the tragic death of one of our brilliant PhD
students,” he said.
“She
was not only an outstanding research scholar, but a highly valued friend and
colleague who made remarkable contributions to the work and activities of the
center.”
A
Foreign Office spokesman said: “We can confirm the death of a British national
in Istanbul. We are providing consular assistance to the family at this
difficult time.”
Sutton’s death comes just
five months after previous IWPR director Ammar Al Shahbander was killed in a
car bomb attack in Baghdad.
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