Diplomats can’t reach Canadians in Turkey
Government efforts to reach two Turkish Canadians arrested in connection with a failed coup in Turkey this month have so far been stymied.
Davud Hanci and Ilhan Erdem were arrested and detained separately over the past week as Turkish authorities swept up thousands of people it accuses of having supported the July 15 coup attempt, which left more than 200 people dead.
Citing privacy laws, Global Affairs Canada would only say that Canadian officials in Turkey are in contact with local authorities and providing consular assistance to the men’s families. A government source, however, confirmed diplomats have not been able to reach Hanci or Erdem.
Both men are dual nationals, meaning they hold both Turkish and Canadian citizenship.
Hanci lives in Calgary and is an imam for the federal and Alberta correctional services. Erdem lived in Toronto and Ottawa, where he was also an imam, before moving back to Turkey after getting his Canadian citizenship.
The U.S. State Department says the Turkish government does not permit Turks with two nationalities and who are arrested in Turkey to contact officials from the other country for help.
“International law on this is non-existent,” Gar Pardy, who served for years as the federal government’s head of consular affairs, said of cases involving dual nationals.
Erdem was arrested at the Ataturk Airport in Istanbul Monday while preparing to board a flight to Canada with his wife and two children, said his friend, Nurcan Topcuoglu.
Turkish media say Erdem is accused of leading the Hizmet movement in Canada.
The Hizmet movement, also known as the Gulen movement, is described as a global network based on the teachings of Fethullah Gulen, the U.S.-based cleric the Turkish government accuses of masterminding the coup.
Hanci was arrested over the weekend. Turkish media say he is accused of being a close associate to Gulen, and a ringleader in the coup.