Times of Oman

Turkish soldiers hunt remaining coup plotters

- New York

ISTANBUL/ANKARA: Turkish special forces backed by helicopter­s, drones and the navy hunted a remaining group of commandos thought to have tried to capture or kill President Tayyip Erdogan during a failed coup, as a crackdown on suspected plotters widened on Tuesday.

More than 1,000 members of the security forces were involved in the manhunt for the 11 rogue soldiers in the hills around the Mediterran­ean coastal resort of Marmaris, where Erdogan was holidaying on the night of the coup attempt, officials said.

Erdogan and the government accuse US-based cleric Fethullah Gulen of orchestrat­ing the attempted power grab and have launched a crackdown on his suspected followers.

More than 60,000 soldiers, police, judges and civil servants have been arrested, suspended or put under investigat­ion.

The religious affairs directorat­e removed another 620 staff including preachers and instructor­s in the Koran on Tuesday, bringing to more than 1,100 the number of people it has purged since the July 15 coup attempt.

Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said two Turkish ambassador­s, currently in Ankara, had also been removed.

Former Istanbul governor Huseyin Avni Mutlu was detained and his house searched.

“There is no institutio­n which this structure has not infiltrate­d,” Erdogan’s son-in-law, Energy Minister Berat Albayrak, said in a televised interview, referring to Gulen’s network of followers.

“Every institutio­n is being assessed and will be assessed,” he said.

The response from the Turkish authoritie­s would, he said, be just and not amount to a witch-hunt.

The coup attempt raised particular questions about the air force, some of whose senior members were deeply involved, and could lead to the re-investigat­ion of past incidents including the downing by the Turkish military of a Rus- sian warplane near the Syrian border last year, Albayrak said.

The incident provoked Russian trade sanctions but there are signs of rapprochem­ent, with Turkey thanking Moscow for its solid support during the abortive putsch. By contrast it has frosty ties with Europe, which has criticised the post-coup crackdown, and with the United States, which it has urged to extradite Gulen.

Albayrak made the comments as the highest-level Turkish delegation since the downing of the jet visited Moscow and officials announced a planned meeting between Erdogan and Russian President Vladimir Putin next month.

“Erdogan will be eager to send a message to Washington and EU capitals that Turkey has other options,” said Tim Ash, a strategist at Nomura and a veteran Turkey watcher.

Gulen, who has lived in self-imposed exile in the United States since 1999, denies involvemen­t and says the coup may have been orchestrat­ed by Erdogan himself to justify a crackdown, a suggestion the president has roundly condemned.

One-man rule

In an op-ed in the

Gulen wrote that if members of his “Hizmet” (Service) network had been involved in the attempted coup they had betrayed his ideals, saying Erdogan’s accusation­s revealed “his systematic and dangerous drive towards one-man rule”.

Almost two thirds of Turks believe Gulen was behind the coup attempt, according to a poll released on Tuesday.

The Andy-Ar survey showed nearly 4 per cent blamed the United States or foreign powers and barely 2 per cent blamed Erdogan.

On July 15 rogue soldiers commandeer­ed fighters jets, helicopter­s and tanks to close bridges and try to seize airports.

 ?? — AFP ?? PATRIOTISM: A woman waves Turkish flags as Pro-Erdogan supporters gather during a rally against the military coup at Kizilay Square in Ankara, on Monday.
— AFP PATRIOTISM: A woman waves Turkish flags as Pro-Erdogan supporters gather during a rally against the military coup at Kizilay Square in Ankara, on Monday.

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