AFP's Maya Gebeily points out that the IS group has not made any claim of responsibility for yesterday's suicide bombing in Istanbul.
Turkey has said that the bombing was carried out by a Saudi asylum seeker.
The victims of yesterday's suicide bombing in Istanbul are being commemorated in Sultanahmet square, Turkey's Hurriyet reports.
Turkey's Haberturk daily has published a series of photos purportedly of Nabil Fadli, the man named as the suicide bomber who killed 10 people in an attack in Istanbul yesterday.
The photos are believed to have been taken in Istanbul at least a week before yesterday's attack.
Today's Zaman reports:
According to the report in Habertürk, Fadli's pictures were taken on Jan. 5, and the attacker, who is suspected of having links to the terrorist Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), submitted his fingerprints for an unknown reason at a state institution in İstanbul.
Syrian state media is reporting that government forces have taken control of the al-Marouniyat village, one kilometer north of Salma, the rebel stronghold in Latakia province captured by loyalist forces yesterday.
State news agency SANA reports this morning that the capture of al-Marouniyat came after heavy clashes with rebels.
Loyalist Twitter accounts posted photos claiming to show fighters from the National Defense Forces (NDF), a volunteer force within the Syrian army, on the outskirts of Salma.
Loyalist forces have made gains in Latakia with assistance in the form of air support from Russia.
On January 12, prominent Chechen militant Muslim Shishani (Murad Margoshvili) posted a video in which he talked of the difficult situation for rebels in Latakia province and called for fighters elsewhere in Syria to support those in Latakia.
A teenage supporter of the IS group who slashed a teacher with a machete in southern France has said he was "proud" of his actions, AFP reports.
A source close to the investigation said that the 15-year-old boy had said he was "ashamed" that he did not manage to kill the 35-year-old teacher, Benjamin Amsellem.
"I don't represent Daesh [IS], they represent me," the teenager reportedly told investigators.
The boy is set to appear before a judge today on terrorism charges.
Turkey's Hurriyet news site is reporting that the Sultanahmet suicide bomber has been identified as a "Saudi asylum seeker."
There was some confusion yesterday over whether the bomber -- named as 28-year-old Nabil Fadli -- was a Syrian or a Saudi who had come to Turkey from Syria.
However, Hurriyet is citing security sources as saying the bomber was a Saudi national.
Fadli applied for asylum to the Zeytinburnu Migration Management Directorate in the Istanbul district on January 5. He had arrived at the center with four other men and then stayed for a few days at his declared address.
In a rather grisly revelation, Hurriyet says Fadli was identified after one of his finger tips was found at the attack site.
Turkey's Interior Minister confirms that 11 people died in yesterday's blast in Sultanahnet -- ten people plus the suicide bomber himself.
A further 11 people are still in hospital after being wounded in the attack. Nine of those are Germans and two are in a critical condition.
Turkey's Interior Minister says that the suicide bomber who carried out yesterday's attack in the Sultanahnet district was not being tracked by police.
The January 12 suicide bombing in Istanbul's Sultanahnet district was the deadliest attack on Germans abroad in 13 years, CNN reports.
The attack killed ten people, at least eight of whom were Germans, according to CNN.
Turkey's Interior Minister Ala says one person has been detained over the bombing in Sultanahmet.