Edmonton Journal

TURKEY IS MARKING ONE YEAR SINCE THE DEFEAT OF THE COUP AIMED AT OUSTING PRESIDENT RECEP TAYYIP ERDOGAN, WITH MASS RALLIES TO SHOWCASE NATIONAL UNITY.

MASS RALLY

- KRISTINA JOVANOVSKI

ANKARA • Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said he would “rip the heads” off traitors and spoke in support of reinstatin­g the death penalty, as hundreds of thousands of citizens gathered Sunday to mark the anniversar­y of a failed coup.

Speaking to a crowd gathered on the bridge in Istanbul where civilians clashed with tanks and soldiers on the night of the putsch last year, Erdogan also said those put on trial should be made to wear outfits similar to detainees at the United States’ most notorious military prison.

“I have spoken with our prime minister and said when they appear in court, they should wear one type of outfit, like in Guantanamo,” Erdogan said to cheers.

Not including the plotters, 249 people were killed when a disgruntle­d faction of the army sent tanks into the streets and war planes into the sky on July 15 in a bid to overthrow Erdogan after one and a half decades in power.

But they were thwarted within hours as the authoritie­s regrouped and people poured into the streets in support of Erdogan, who blamed followers of his ally-turned-nemesis, the U.S.based preacher Fethullah Gulen.

Turkish authoritie­s declared Saturday an annual national holiday of “democracy and unity,” with a gruelling program of events including a 3 a.m. speech by the president outside parliament in Ankara to commemorat­e the building being bombed.

Since the failed plot, a government crackdown has seen 50,000 people jailed, including academics, public servants and soldiers accused of supporting the Gulen movement.

On Friday, more than 7,000 state employees, including teachers and police officers, were dismissed from their jobs, adding to about 150,000 who have also been dismissed or suspended during the purge.

Restoratio­n of the death penalty would likely be a final blow to Turkey’s longrunnin­g attempts to join the EU. Jean-Claude Juncker, president of the European Commission, urged Erdogan Sunday to uphold European values if he wants to join the bloc.

Erdogan said he would back restoring the death penalty if parliament chose to vote on the matter: “I don’t care what foreigners say. I care about what our people say.”

He also stated that a security committee Monday would consider extending the state of emergency that has been in place since the failed coup and has allowed the government to rule by decree.

Sunday, there was a strong and solemn emphasis on the 249 people who died fighting the putsch, with people carrying placards showing the faces of those who were killed. Erdogan said that people that night fought “tanks with their fists.”

 ?? OZAN KOSE / AFP / GETTY IMAGES ??
OZAN KOSE / AFP / GETTY IMAGES

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