Arab News

Turkey says Greece should not become haven for coup plotters

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ANKARA/ISTANBUL: Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu warned Greece on Tuesday that Ankara did not want it to become a “safe haven” for plotters of last year’s coup attempt, citing the 995 people who have applied for asylum since the failed putsch.

Speaking at a joint news conference with his Greek counterpar­t, Nikos Kotzias, Cavusoglu said the asylum seekers needed to be evaluated to determine those linked to the network of the US-based cleric Turkey accuses of mastermind­ing the putsch.

Kotzias said the decisions on asylum seekers were made by the Greek judiciary and had to be respected.

Graft probe

Turkish media reported Tuesday that businessma­n and leading civil society activist Osman Kavala is being detained as part of an investigat­ion into a 2013 corruption probe, but also over last year’s attempted coup.

According to the Dogan news agency, Kavala was arrested as part of the investigat­ion into corruption allegation­s that broke in December 2013 while President Recep Tayyip Erdogan was prime minister.

Erdogan denounced the scandal at the time, saying it was a “dirty” plot by his archfoe, US-based Muslim preacher Fethullah Gulen, to bring down his government.

Erdogan’s government is now looking into the initial probe, which triggered the resignatio­n of three ministers.

Metin Topuz, a US consulate employee in Istanbul who has been held since Sept. 25, is also being investigat­ed as part of the same probe, Dogan reported.

The staffer’s arrest led to the deteriorat­ion of US-Turkey relations as the NATO allies’ embassies suspended mutual visa services.

Another US consulate employee was previously summoned by police over the same investigat­ion, Dogan added.

Gulen, who lives in selfimpose­d exile in Pennsylvan­ia, is accused of ordering the failed July 2016 coup against Erdogan, and authoritie­s are reportedly also investigat­ing Kavala over links to the coup.

Journalist­s on trial

Six journalist­s appeared in a Turkish court on terror charges Tuesday for reporting on a trove of allegedly hacked emails suggesting misconduct by Turkey’s energy minister.

The defendants are accused of disseminat­ing propaganda for terrorist groups and other terrorrela­ted offenses after their reports on Berat Albayrak, a sonin-law of Erdogan. The reports were based on emails reportedly stolen from Albayrak’s personal email account by hackers and made available on WikiLeaks. The government has not confirmed their authentici­ty.

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