Oman Daily Observer

Turkey fires 2,700 staff; coup suspects to wear uniforms

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ANKARA: The Turkish government on Sunday ordered the sacking of more than 2,700 people working in public institutio­ns over alleged links to “terror” groups, in the latest round of purges since last year’s failed coup.

In a separate emergency decree, the country’s defence procuremen­t agency was ordered to answer to President Recep Tayyip Erdogan instead of the defence ministry, in a move widely viewed as a further expansion of his powers.

Turkey’s intelligen­ce service (MIT) also came under Erdogan’s control in August. A total of 2,756 people including academics, soldiers and military personal were removed from different bodies including the interior, foreign and defence ministries, according to the Official Gazette.

All those dismissed were either members of “terror” organisati­ons or had links to structures which were acting against national security, it said.

17 Turkish institutio­ns were also ordered to close, including two newspapers and seven associatio­ns.

More than 140,000 people including judges, lawyers and academics have been sacked or suspended since a failed coup in July last year, while some 55,000 people have been arrested over suspected links to US-based cleric Fethullah Gulen and the coup attempt.

Turkey claims Gulen and his Hizmet (service) movement, which it calls the “Fethullah Terrorist Organisati­on”, ordered and conducted the attempted coup. Gulen, who’s lived in selfimpose­d exile in Pennsylvan­ia since 1999, denies any links to terrorism and the failed putsch.

Erdogan, who has also accused Gulen and his followers of infiltrati­ng state institutio­ns, has said the sackings were necessary to remove what he called the “virus” of Gulen’s influence from state bodies. Critics accuse the government of using state of emergency legislatio­n to target its opponents, including opposition journalist­s and pro-Kurdish critics. The co-leader of the main pro-Kurdish opposition Peoples’ Democratic Party, Selahattin Demirtas, is among those detained on terrorism charges, something he denies.

The decree on dismissals was published alongside another announceme­nt that men accused of “acting against the constituti­onal order” would have to wear a single colour uniform, either brown or grey, during court hearings.

The uniform will also apply to those accused of attempting to abolish the Turkish government and will come into force next month.

Erdogan previously said that alleged coup-plotters would wear clothing similar to the notorious orange jumpsuits used at the US military prison in Guantanamo Bay. The move is in response to a man, accused of plotting to assassinat­e Erdogan, appearing in court in July wearing a white “Hero” T-shirt.

 ?? — AFP ?? Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan (C-R) is welcomed by his Sudanese counterpar­t Omar al-Bashir (C-L) upon his arrival in Khartoum on Sunday for a two-day-official visit.
— AFP Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan (C-R) is welcomed by his Sudanese counterpar­t Omar al-Bashir (C-L) upon his arrival in Khartoum on Sunday for a two-day-official visit.

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