The three attackers who struck Istanbul's international airport Tuesday were from Russia, Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan, the Turkish prime minister's office confirmed to ABC News.
A Turkish official said the Russian attacker was from the country's restive Dagestan region, the epicenter of an Islamic insurgency against the Russian state.
The attackers lived in a working-class neighborhood in Istanbul, with a steel door to their apartment.
Neighbors described suspicious activity at the apartment, where they say the shades were always drawn shut.
One neighbor, who did not want to be identified, told ABC News there was a chemical smell coming from another apartment, and on Sunday the smell was so strong she thought there was a gas leak and called the landlord.
Meanwhile, 13 arrests were made in Istanbul after a series of overnight anti-terror raids, according to Turkey's Ministry of the Interior. Of those arrested, three were foreign nationals. Their nationalities were not identified and it was unclear whether the raids were directly linked to the attack.
The overnight operation consisted of 16 raids at different addresses in Istanbul, the ministry said. State-run media reported the addresses were in the city's Pendik, Basaksehir and Sultanbeyli neighborhoods.
The raids follow Tuesday's deadly attack at the city's Ataturk airport, which left 43 dead, not including the three attackers who blew themselves up after opening fire, the ministry said.
The attack also left 238 people wounded. As of today, 144 injured victims have been discharged from the hospital and 94 remain under treatment. The bodies of 33 people who lost their lives in the deadly attack have been handed over to their relatives, according to Istanbul Gov. Vasip Sahin.
No one has claimed responsibility for the attack, carried out by three individuals, but Turkey's interior minister has said "all findings show it’s ISIS." And CIA Director John Brennan said Tuesday the attack "bears the hallmarks" of ISIS’ "depravity."
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