Kathimerini English

Extraditio­n cases head to Supreme Court

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Three out of the eight Turkish officers who sought asylum in Greece after July’s botched coup in Turkey will be extradited, a Greek court ruled yesterday. The decision, which was appealed by all three, follows the court’s rejection of Ankara’s extraditio­n request for three other Turkish servicemen on Monday, which was also appealed by a prosecutor.

The final decision will lie with the Supreme Court, which will examine all the appeals related to the six officers within the next eight days, in accordance with Greek law. The six men will remain in custody pending their appeals.

The fate of the remaining two Turkish officers will be decided over the next few days.

Turkey wanted all eight men to be extradited on charges they participat­ed in the coup attempt and for their alleged role in an assassinat­ion attempt against Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. The servicemen landed in the northern Greek city of Alexandrou­poli a day after the coup and sought asylum but their request was rejected by Greek authoritie­s in September.

Yesterday, judges on the panel of the Athens Council of Appeals rejected Ankara’s claim that they took part in the assassinat­ion attempt, but approved their extraditio­n after accepting the charges that they participat­ed in the coup and that, with their alleged actions, impeded a session of the Turkish Parliament and seized a military chopper.

The lawyer of the three claimed the reason why the court decided to extradite his clients was Turkey’s response to Monday’s ruling.

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