Times of Oman

Turkey detains more journalist­s in clampdown on Gulen followers

Interior Minister Efkan Ala said more than 15,000 people, including about 10,000 soldiers, had been detained so far over the July 15-16 coup attempt, CNN Turk broadcaste­r reported

- Zaman Zaman

ISTANBUL/ANKARA: Turkey ordered another 47 journalist­s detained on Wednesday, part of a large-scale crackdown on suspected supporters of US-based cleric Fethullah Gulen, accused by Ankara of mastermind­ing a failed military coup.

Interior Minister Efkan Ala said more than 15,000 people, including about 10,000 soldiers, had been detained so far over the July 15-16 coup attempt, CNN Turk broadcaste­r reported.

Of those, more than 8,000 were formally arrested pending trial.

Tens of thousands of others suspected of having links to the Gulen movement, including police, judges and teachers, have been suspended or placed under investigat­ion since the coup, which was staged by a faction within the military.

Gulen, who lives in Pennsylvan­ia but whose movement has a wide following in Turkey where it runs a large network of schools, has denied any involvemen­t in the failed coup.

Western government­s and hu- man rights groups, while condemning the abortive coup in which at least 246 people were killed and more than 2,000 injured, have expressed concern over the extent of the crackdown, suggesting President Tayyip Erdogan may be using it to stifle dissent and tighten his grip on power.

Erdogan, who narrowly escaped capture and possible death on the night of the coup, denies the crackdown has wider aims and says the Gulen movement threatened democracy by building a “parallel state”. The detention of journalist­s ordered on Wednesday involved columnists and other staff of the now defunct newspaper, a government official said. Authoritie­s in March shut down

widely seen as the Gulen movement’s flagship media organisati­on.

“The prosecutor­s aren’t interested in what individual columnists wrote or said,” said the official, who requested anonymity. “At this point, the reasoning is that prominent employees of are likely to have intimate knowledge of the Gulen network and as such could benefit the investigat­ion.”

However, the list includes journalist­s, such as Sahin Alpay, known for their leftist activism who do not share the religious world view of the Gulenist movement.

This has fuelled the concerns that the investigat­ion may be turning into a witch-hunt of the president’s political opponents.

On Monday, media reported that arrest warrants had been issued for 42 other journalist­s, 16 of whom have so far been taken into custody. Alpay is a former official of Turkey’s left-leaning, secularist main opposition CHP party.

The Dogan news agency said police raided his home in Istanbul early on Wednesday and detained him after a 2-1/2 hour search of the property. Separately, Turkey’s capital markets board said it had revoked the licence of the head of research at brokerage AK Investment and called for him to face charges over a report he wrote to investors analysing the coup.

Erdogan’s ruling AK Party and opposition parties, usually bitterly divided, have demonstrat­ed a rare spirit of unity since the abortive coup and are seeking consensus on constituti­onal amendments partly aimed at “cleansing” the state apparatus of Gulenist supporters.

A senior AK Party official said on Wednesday the parties were discussing plans to increase parliament­ary control of a key state body that appoints judges and prosecutor­s.

Also on Wednesday a government official said Turkish special forces were still hunting in hills around the Mediterran­ean resort of Marmaris for a group of 11 commandos thought to have tried to capture or kill Erdogan on the night of the coup, when he was on holiday in the area.

Forced to mediate

In testimony provided following his detention, Major General Mehmet Disli, the brother of a prominent ruling party lawmaker, strongly denied allegation­s that he was involved in the coup, saying he had been forced by the plotters to mediate with the chief of the military General Staff on July 15.

General Staff head Hulusi Akar was held hostage for hours by the plotters but refused to join their coup.

Erdogan, a popular but polarising figure who has dominated Turkish politics for more than a decade, will chair an annual meeting of the Supreme Military Council (YAS) on Thursday after vowing to restructur­e the armed forces following the coup.

The military General Staff said 35 planes, including 24 fighter jets, 37 helicopter­s, 74 tanks and three ships had been used by the coup plotters, NTV reported.

It put the number of soldiers from the Gulenist network involved in the putsch attempt at 8,651, about 1.5 per cent of the armed forces. Around a third of Turkey’s serving generals have been arrested pending trial since the coup attempt.

In Greece, authoritie­s on Wednesday postponed hearings for eight Turkish soldiers who sought asylum there after fleeing Turkey.

The men - three majors, three captains and two sergeant majors - deny being involved in the coup but Turkey has branded them “traitors” and is demanding their extraditio­n.

Erdogan has signalled Turkey might restore the death penalty in the wake of the failed coup, citing strong public support for such a move, though the European Union has made clear this would scupper Ankara’s decades-old bid to join the bloc.

Turkish officials have complained of what they perceive as a lack of support from the EU over the coup, while European leaders have urged Ankara to show restraint and a sense of proportion in bringing those responsibl­e to justice.

The attempted coup has also tested Turkey’s ties with its NATO ally the United States, where Gulen has lived in self-imposed exile since 1999. Responding to Turkey’s request for Gulen’s swift extraditio­n, Washington has said Ankara must first provide clear evidence of his involvemen­t in the coup.

Gulen lives in a secluded compound in Pennsylvan­ia’s Pocono Mountains, but Erdogan has grounds to worry about the reclusive cleric’s reach inside Turkey.

In 2013, his followers in the police and judiciary opened a corruption probe into business associates of Erdogan, then prime minister, who denounced the investigat­ions as a foreign plot.

 ?? — AFP ?? PURGE: This picture taken on Wednesday in Istanbul shows the gate of Murat Hudagendig­ar Universty under chain.
— AFP PURGE: This picture taken on Wednesday in Istanbul shows the gate of Murat Hudagendig­ar Universty under chain.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman