Turkish police have detained hundreds of suspected ISIL members in nationwide raids, according to state media, in the largest operations in the country to target the armed group.
Around 460 suspects, most of them foreign nationals, were arrested in at least 18 provinces, state-run Anadolu news agency reported on Sunday.
At least 60 people were held in the capital, Ankara, while 150 were arrested in Sanliurfa in the southeast and a further 47 in the nearby city of Gaziantep close to the Syrian border. 

In the Aegean province of Izmir, security forces held at least nine suspected ISIL members who were allegedly preparing for an attack.
Another 18 people were arrested in Istanbul and the neighbouring province of Kocaeli on suspicion of planning attacks. Fourteen foreigners, including 10 children, were due to be deported.

"This is the largest coordinated and simultaneous raids that Turkey has taken out on what it says are 'suspected members of ISIL' across the country," Al Jazeera's Stefanie Dekker, reporting from Gaziantepsaid. 
"From what we understand, all of these raids took place around the same time at dawn on Sunday," she continued, adding that the operation signalled Turkey's clear intentions to give a "message that it is clamping down" on the armed group.
"Turkey has suffered multiple attacks either claimed by ISIL or inspired by it," Dekker said.
The Turkish government holds ISIL, which stands for Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, and is also known as ISIS, responsible for several attacks in Turkey. 
Most recently, ISIL claimed responsibility for a New Year's Eve attack on the Reina nightclub in Istanbul in which 39 people were killed.
Police detained the suspected attacker, Abdulgadir Masharipov, an Uzbek national, on January 16  and authorities say he has confessed to the massacre.
Turkish troops are also engaged in battles against ISIL fighters in the Syrian town of al-Bab, in the fiercest fighting yet of Ankara's military's campaign inside Syria that started in August.
At least 48 Turkish soldiers have been killed in the incursion so far, according to an AFP news agency tally.