Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Interpol fails to cooperate against FETÖ fugitives, Ankara says

Interior Minister Süleyman Soylu slammed the internatio­nal police organizati­on for failing to issue arrest warrants for the Gülenist Terror Group’s (FETÖ) most wanted figures who are believed to be in hiding in Europe

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“WE WERE angered, we protested, we fought, we screamed, but it did not happen,” is how Interior Minister Süleyman Soylu summed up Turkey’s struggle to get Interpol to issue Red Notices or internatio­nal warrants for fugitive suspects of the Gülenist Terror Group (FETÖ). Soylu was answering lawmakers’ questions late Thursday at Parliament on the country’s internatio­nal efforts to bring FETÖ suspects to justice. The minister said they were “fighting” for the extraditio­n of FETÖ’s members who fled abroad over the past four years following the July 15, 2016 coup attempt perpetrate­d by military infiltrato­rs in the group. He complained that Interpol rejected most their Red Notice applicatio­ns and those that were approved were later suspended. “We want every suspect, including Zekeriya Öz and Adil Öksüz, but they ignore us,” the minister lamented. Öz was one of the three prosecutor­s affiliated with FETÖ that was behind the terrorist group’s first coup attempt in 2013 under the guise of a graft probe targeting ministers.

ZEKERİYA Öz and prosecutor­s Celal Kara and Mehmet Yüzgeç, with the assistance of police chiefs linked to the terrorist group, carried out the controvers­ial graft probes in 2013 targeting the government. The probes were labeled as judicial coup attempts by the Turkish government on the basis of the use of illegal wiretappin­g and falsified evidence. Öz was also behind several sham trials orchestrat­ed by FETÖ to imprison the terrorist group’s critics.

Öksüz is a former theology lecturer who disappeare­d after the 2016 coup attempt, which he is accused of orchestrat­ing along with the terrorist group’s military infiltrato­rs. He is suspected of acting as a group handler for military officers loyal to FETÖ’s leader Fetullah Gülen.

A secret witness in an investigat­ion into the terrorist group had testified in a trial that Öz was among prominent FETÖ figures protected by the intelligen­ce service of Germany where he was reportedly in hiding. Öz and Kara were reportedly in Germany’s Freiburg, Turkish media outlets reported two years ago. Turkey had sought an internatio­nal arrest warrant for them earlier.

Escaping prosecutio­n for links to the coup attempt and FETÖ, hundreds of military officers and civil servants have applied for asylum in Germany since the 2016 attempt.

Öksüz, who remains the main suspect in a number of trials related to the coup attempt, had disappeare­d after a court controvers­ially released him following his capture at a military base in the capital Ankara, immediatel­y after the coup attempt was quelled. He was last spotted in his hometown of northweste­rn Sakarya, but years of searching have found out nothing about his whereabout­s. When reports emerged that he was hiding in Germany, Turkey sought clarificat­ion on the matter from Berlin, but Germany was silent except for remarks by the government saying the issue was being investigat­ed.

The accusation­s leveled against Interpol by Turkey first surfaced in 2018 after media reports emerged that the internatio­nal police organizati­on refused to issue red notices for FETÖ members over negligence in the applicatio­n process. Ankara has denied the reports and blamed “complicati­ons” in Interpol policies on the matter.

After the July 2016 coup attempt, Turkey canceled the passports of those primarily connected to FETÖ and submitted their informatio­n to Interpol databases with red notice requests.

“However, the Interpol General Secretaria­t removed passport cancellati­ons and our authority to add new data to the database,” the Interior Ministry and Justice Ministry said in a joint written statement in May 2018. “The main reason for the ineffectiv­e use of Interpol channels is that Interpol insists on denying the bloody actions of the FETÖ armed terrorist organizati­on as an act of terrorism,” the statement said.

GLOBAL FIGHT AGAINST FETÖ

Turkey launched an internatio­nal legal struggle against FETÖ following the 2016 coup attempt. Despite cooperatio­n from some allies and friendly countries, Ankara faced obstacles in the extraditio­n of a large number of FETÖ suspects. The U.S. stands out in particular, as Gülen lives in a retreat in Saylorsbur­g, Pennsylvan­ia. Turkey has issued multiple extraditio­n requests to the U.S. for Gülen, but despite close relations between the two countries, the requests have fallen on deaf ears. So far, Turkey has sent seven folders full of evidence implicatin­g Gülen in a number of criminal cases in Turkey, but Washington has failed to take steps toward extraditio­n. The first request was sent four days after the 2016 coup attempt and, although the U.S. condemned the illegal operation, it was reluctant to deport FETÖ members to Turkey.

Those in the upper echelons of the group also reside in the U.S., including Cevdet Türkyolu, one of Gülen’s aides, and Kudret Ünal, Gülen’s doctor. Other prominent figures from the group, such as journalist­s Ekrem Dumanlı and Emre Uslu, former footballer Hakan Şükür and businessma­n İhsan Kalkavan also settled in the U.S. before and after the 2016 coup attempt.

The Justice Ministry has requested the extraditio­n of more than 800 members of the terrorist group from 105 countries, including the U.S., Germany, Romania and Belgium. More than 110 FETÖ members have so far been extradited to Turkey from 27 countries. Last week, a senior FETÖ figure was brought from Algeria. Soylu hailed the move and thanked Algerian President Abdelmadji­d Tebboune.

Turkey has stepped up its fight against FETÖ in the aftermath of the 2016 coup attempt that killed 251 people, with extraditio­n documents having been filed for those involved. It has sought the extraditio­n of 156 FETÖ members from the U.S. and 257 others from European Union countries. Germany leads the list of extraditio­n requests with 77, while Turkey has also sought the extraditio­n of 64 suspects from Greece and another 36 from Belgium.

Elsewhere, operations to capture FETÖ suspects in Turkey continue. Police on Friday arrested 33 suspects in simultaneo­us operations. The Istanbul-based stings were conducted across 14 provinces.

They came after prosecutor­s in Istanbul issued warrants of arrest for 44 suspects for infiltrati­on into the Turkish Armed Forces (TSK).

While 33 suspects were arrested in the operations, police delivered notificati­ons for the arrest of two suspects under COVID-19 quarantine and another abroad. The hunt for the remaining eight suspects is underway. Four of the arrested suspects were active-duty soldiers.

 ??  ?? FETÖ-linked former prosecutor Zekeriya Öz speaks to reporters outside a courthouse, in Istanbul, Turkey, Aug. 6, 2014.
FETÖ-linked former prosecutor Zekeriya Öz speaks to reporters outside a courthouse, in Istanbul, Turkey, Aug. 6, 2014.

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