Arab News

Ankara prosecutor­s investigat­e opposition MP’s assassinat­ion claim

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ISTANBUL: Prosecutor­s have launched an investigat­ion into an opposition MP’s claim that Turkish dissidents in Europe would be the target of assassinat­ion plots, the private Dogan news agency reported on Friday.

Garo Paylan, a lawmaker from the pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP), on Wednesday claimed that he received intelligen­ce about assassinat­ion plots targeting Turkish citizens in Europe, and in particular in Germany.

“I received intelligen­ce last week of assassinat­ion plans or a wave of assassinat­ions targeting our citizens in Europe, especially those living in Germany, informatio­n that I confirmed via multiple sources,” he told a news conference in Parliament.

Ankara has launched a massive crackdown in the wake of failed July 15, 2016 coup which Turkey blames on US-based cleric Fethullah Gulen, who has denied any role.

Since then, over 55,000 people have been arrested over alleged links to Gulen and the coup bid while more than 140,000 public sector employees have been suspended or sacked in a purge which has raised concern in the West.

Critics have branded the government measures as excessive, saying they have gone well beyond alleged coup plotters and extended to government opponents.

Many Turks have sought asylum in Germany, which is already home to a sizeable Turkish community. Berlin has publicly criticized Turkey’s mass crackdown.

Paylan claimed that thousands of academics and journalist­s were forced to leave Europe as they were labelled “traitors” by the government — rhetoric which he said prompted “certain quarters to take action.”

He also said that plotters had a list of people who would be assassinat­ed, adding that he had informed Turkish intelligen­ce and the police about the tip-off.

Paylan has now been “invited by the Ankara chief public prosecutor’s office to be listened to as a witness,” Dogan reported.

There was no immediate reaction from the government on Paylan’s claims.

15 senior military

officers held

In a related developmen­t, Turkish police arrested 15 senior military officers in an investigat­ion into the network of a US-based cleric who Ankara accuses of orchestrat­ing last year’s attempted coup, state-run Anadolu news agency said on Friday.

It said police were seeking one more officer in the operation, focused on the capital Ankara and spread across nine provinces, adding that 12 of the total 16 suspects were serving officers.

Among the suspects were seven colonels and nine lieutenant colonels from Turkey’s gendarmeri­e force, which maintains security in rural areas, the Hurriyet news website said.

More than 50,000 people, including security personnel and civil servants, have been jailed pending trial in the aftermath of the failed putsch, which the government blames on Islamic preacher Fethullah Gulen. He has denied involvemen­t.

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