The Herald (South Africa)

34 jailed for life over Erdogan death plot

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A TURKISH court yesterday handed life sentences to 34 people convicted of plotting to assassinat­e President Recep Tayyip Erdogan at an Aegean hotel during last year’s failed coup.

The defendants, who include senior military officers, were each given four life sentences at the trial in the southweste­rn city of Mugla.

The number of sentences for a total of 47 suspects may yet go up as the verdict is read out.

The trial began on February 20 and is one of many such processes taking place across Turkey to try those who allegedly took part in the failed bid to oust Erdogan on July 15 last year.

Some verdicts have already been handed out in lower-profile cases but it is the first ruling involving alleged top plotters.

The failed coup left 249 people dead, not including the putschists, and the authoritie­s have vowed no compromise in bringing those involved to justice.

More than 50 000 people have been arrested under the state of emergency imposed following the coup bid during a heavily criticised crackdown which has raised fears over Turkey’s justice system in the West.

Turkey accuses Pennsylvan­iabased Muslim cleric Fethullah Gulen of orchestrat­ing the attempted coup.

Gulen, a former Erdogan ally turned arch-foe, strongly denies Ankara’s claims.

Some of the suspects, including former Brigadier-General Gokhan Sahin Sonmezates, admitted taking part in the coup bid during the trial but denied any links to Gulen.

Gulen was also on trial in absentia. But the judge ruled to separate his case from the trial along with two other suspects.

Erdogan has said the assassinat­ion plot left him minutes from death after he fled the hotel in Marmaris, where he had been holidaying with his family, and went back to Istanbul by plane.

But some commentato­rs have cast doubt on whether the president was in such immediate danger as the assassinat­ion team only arrived at the hotel well after he had left.

According to the parliament­ary commission that investigat­ed the coup plot, a 34-man team of putschists arrived at Erdogan’s hotel at 3.20am.

But Erdogan had already landed in Istanbul at 3.40am.

Some Erdogan supporters had called for the plotters to face the death penalty, which Turkey abolished in 2004 as part of its bid to join the European Union.

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