The Niagara Falls Review

Documents detail spying

Austrian lawmaker presents notes pointing to global surveillan­ce by Turkey

- GEORGE JAHN

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

VIENNA — A hodge-podge of documents presented by a senior Austrian lawmaker purports to show a Turkish global surveillan­ce network aimed at underminin­g organizati­ons loyal to a Muslim cleric who Turkey believes was behind last year’s coup attempt.

Greens Parliament­arian Peter Pilz this week showed selected reporters memos from what he says are Turkish consulates and embassies in 35 countries as far flung as Kosovo, Japan and Australia reporting back to Ankara.

Depending on the country, the correspond­ence ranges from historical overviews of organizati­ons backed by U.S.-based cleric Fethullah Gulen, to detailed listings of schools, business and women’s organizati­ons, religious societies, media outlets and non-government­al organizati­ons. Some contain the names, addresses and personal details of those involved.

Officials from Austria’s Interior Minister said they hadn’t seen the latest documents, but were treating as genuine ones presented by Pilz that focused only on Austria. The Turkish Foreign Ministry didn’t immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Pilz shared the new documents with selected reporters Thursday in Turkish and in German translatio­ns. An Associated Press review of selected Turkish originals indicates they were authentic.

Pilz spoke of a “huge ... network consisting of associatio­ns, clubs and mosques” that keeps tabs on Gulen via religious attaches at diplomatic representa­tions who report back to Turkey.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is pressing nations to crack down on the Gulen movement’s network of schools and charities outside of Turkey. He accuses Gulen of orchestrat­ing the July 15 coup attempt that saw renegade military officers and soldiers use fighter jets, helicopter­s and tanks to attack parliament and other state buildings. Some 270 people were killed.

Gulen condemned the attempted coup and denied he was involved, though he acknowledg­ed that some of his supporters may have participat­ed.

Pilz said that law enforcemen­t officials in Germany were also familiar with his Turkish source. He said that he believes the list is only partial, but couldn’t say why the source chose the countries he did or what went into the selection of the documents.

Some of the correspond­ence is neutral in tone, but not all. A document from the Turkish religious attache with diplomatic accreditat­ion to Belgium describes Gulen’s organizati­on as “blood-stained.”

It warns that a “European Profession­al Network” controlled by Gulen supporters is trying to “penetrate EU institutio­ns.” Excerpts from other countries:

A report from the Turkish general consulate in Munich on the 2014 “Turkish Olympics” attended by Turks from all over Germany notes the support of numerous German “lawmakers, mayors, police chiefs” and other officials, and identifies some by name.

From Finland, the report names key people surveilled, with details on some. It notes one is responsibl­e for “contact with small businessme­n.” It lists his birthplace and university in Turkey, also names his wife and says she “is responsibl­e for the women.”

The Kosovo report warns that the Gulen movement is gaining influence through its schools, an observatio­n also found in documents from other countries. It says the son of President Hashim Thaci is among the “children of the important families of Kosovo politics and business” attending such schools.

In Germany, where Turkey’s intelligen­ce agency recently gave its German counterpar­t a list of suspected Gulen supporters, Interior Minister Thomas de Maziere said Thursday the move may have been intended to “provoke us in some way.”

The list contained the names of around 300 alleged Gulen supporters thought to be living in Germany, among them reportedly a German lawmaker.

Earlier this year, an official of Germany’s domestic intelligen­ce agency said that 13 imams affiliated with DITIB, the union of TurkishIsl­amic cultural organizati­ons in Germany, had sent the names of alleged Gulen supporters to the Turkish religious authority.

Burkhard Freier said Diyanet, the Turkish government’s foreign department of the Office for Religious Affairs, had told employees in September to report the activities of groups such as the Gulen movement, and religious attaches at consulates had passed the order on to imams.

The matter also came up when German Chancellor Angela Merkel visited Ankara in January. She said then that the two nations must discuss any perceived problems with the Gulen movement “with each other.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Austrial politician Peter Pilz presented documents to the media that purport to show a Turkish global surveillan­ce network aimed at underminin­g organizati­ons loyal to a Muslim cleric who Turkey believes was behind last year’s coup attempt.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Austrial politician Peter Pilz presented documents to the media that purport to show a Turkish global surveillan­ce network aimed at underminin­g organizati­ons loyal to a Muslim cleric who Turkey believes was behind last year’s coup attempt.
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