Istanbul, Turkiye: A massive manhunt for a gunman who killed six people in southern Turkiye ended early Tuesday when he turned the gun on himself after being cornered by police, the IHA news agency reported.
The 37-year-old suspect had fled to a forested area after going on a rampage with a gun near Tarsus, which lies between the southern cities of Mersin and Adana, in which he shot dead six people and wounded another eight.
The Anadolu state news agency said the man had reportedly shot dead his ex-wife before heading out on a murderous spree.
The DHA and IHA news agencies said the suspect opened fire in a restaurant, killing its owner and an employee, before fleeing and shooting dead two other men -- one of them a shepherd watching his animals nearby, and the other a truck driver at a petrol station.
Who the sixth victim was unclear.
The shooter fled with police launching a massive manhunt involving helicopters, which lasted into the early hours of Tuesday when they located him inside a house about 10 kilometres from where the shootings began.
The suspect turned the gun on himself to avoid being caught, IHA said.
Speaking to the agency from his hospital bed, Mehmet Han Topal, who works at the restaurant where the shootings began and who was wounded in the leg, described what happened.
"He came in without a word... We thought he was getting his telephone out, but he brought out a pistol," he said.
"I got down. He fired at me."
In a statement posted on X overnight, the Mersin governor's office said the incident began just before 2pm (1100 GMT) and described the suspect as having had "multiple hospital admissions due to prohibited substance dependency and various psychiatric diagnoses".