The Jerusalem Post

Turkish Airlines fires personnel after failed coup

-

ISTANBUL (Reuters) – Turkey’s state-run Turkish Airlines fired more than 100 employees, including management and cabin crew, as part of a purge at state institutio­ns to root out supporters of an abortive coup, Turkish media reported on Monday.

The dismissals at the national carrier occurred Sunday after it was determined the employees were linked to a religious movement President Tayyip Erdogan has said attempted to overthrow the government on July 15, Sabah newspaper said.

An official at Turkish Airlines, Europe’s fourth-biggest carrier, declined to comment.

Other reports said the dismissals were due to “inefficien­cy.” Thelira.com, a financial-news website, said about 250 cabin crew were dismissed, along with 100 management and administra­tive staff.

Aviation news site Airporthab­er.com said that among those let go was a deputy chief executive responsibl­e for the airline’s financial affairs.

Authoritie­s have sacked, suspended or detained some 60,000 people, mainly public-sector employees, after a failed coup by a small faction in the military. They are accused of sympathizi­ng or belonging to a religious group led by Fethullah Gulen, an Islamic preacher in self-imposed exile in the United States.

Separately, landline operator Turk Telekom, which is 30 percent state-owned, sacked 198 people on Friday in “cooperatio­n with the security forces” and said some managers had been summoned by prosecutor­s for testimony in connection with the coup investigat­ion, according to e-mailed statements.

More than 240 people were killed and 2,000 injured in violence surroundin­g the July 15 coup attempt.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel