The National - News

ALMOST 150 ON TRIAL OVER BRIDGE VIOLENCE DURING TURKEY COUP

Bridge across Bosphorus strait was the scene of deadly fighting between Mr Erdogan’s supporters and soldiers

- Agence France-Presse

Almost 150 former Turkish military personnel went on trial yesterday over clashes on an Istanbul bridge during last year’s failed coup that killed dozens of people.

The bridge across the Bosphorus strait in Istanbul was the scene of bloody fighting between President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s supporters and renegade soldiers seeking to oust the elected government on the night of July 15, 2016.

It was later renamed by the government as July 15 Martyrs’ Bridge.

The dead included Mr Erdogan’s campaign manager Erol Olcok and his 16-year-old son Abdullah Tayyip, who were killed when soldiers opened fire on protesters on the bridge that connects Asia and Europe.

Erol Olcok had named his son after Mr Erdogan and his predecesso­r as president, Abdullah Gul.

A total of 143 suspects, including 30 officers, appeared in court.

All the suspects barring eight are being held under arrest.

They are accused of crimes ranging from murder to attempting to overthrow the parliament and the government, according to the 1,052-page indictment.

If convicted, the suspects each face 37 life sentences, according to the state-run Anadolu news agency.

Outside the court, souvenir sellers tried to catch on the mood of national solidarity by selling scarves, banners and other memorabili­a with Mr Erdogan’s face on.

“Your path is our path,” read one slogan on a scarf.

Many civilians rushed to the bridge on the night of the coup, heeding Mr Erdogan’s call to quash the putsch bid, but the renegade soldiers then shot at them.

Fatmanur Goksu, 24, was one of those shot on the bridge, as well as her father.

“The same bullet hit my arm and then my father’s,” she said outside the court, where some of the victims’ relatives gathered wearing T-shirts with the word “martyr” and the name of their dead loved one.

Ms Goksu said she got out onto the streets “without any second thought” after Mr Erdogan’s call.

Victims’ relatives were brought to court in a special red bus with the slogan “We have not forgotten July 15 and we will not forget!” written on the side.

Thirty-four civilians and seven coup plotters were killed on the Bosphorus bridge, according to the indictment.

By the early morning hours the soldiers surrendere­d to police, laying down their arms on the bridge and raising their hands in an enduring image of the coup’s defeat.

Mr Erdogan attended the funeral of the Olcoks and others two days after the coup bid, weeping openly in a rare show of emotion.

“We’re here today to settle accounts with those who attempted to invade our country,” Mahir Unal, ruling Justice and Developmen­t Party (AKP) spokesman said before the trial began.

The trial is one of several seeking to bring to justice those believed to have played a role in the coup bid which killed 249 people, not including the putschists.

Veysel Kilic, the father of one of the military academy students being held, said he did not have any hope in the “unsound” justice system. Mr Kilic took part in the main opposition leader Kemal Kilicdarog­u’s month-long foot march in July to protest against alleged injustices under Mr Erdogan.

Like many relatives, Mr Kilic said his air force academy student son was “deceived” and “told to join an unplanned exercise to measure their obedience to their commander”.

“The students were totally unaware. They did not fire. Those children remained neutral,” adding that more would have been killed if the students had taken sides.

Last week, a court in south-western Turkey handed life sentences to 40 people convicted of plotting to assassinat­e Mr Erdogan at an Aegean hotel.

Mr Erdogan has vowed to purge all state institutio­ns to clean the “virus” of US-based Muslim preacher Fethullah Gulen, whom his government blames for the putsch.

The cleric, who lives in Pennsylvan­ia, has denied any involvemen­t.

More than 50,000 people have been arrested since last July, accused of links to the Gulen movement, and more than 140,000 public sector employees have been sacked or suspended.

 ??  ?? Families of victims killed on the Bosphorus bridge flash a four-finger sign called ‘the rabia’ as they arrive by bus at the Silivri prison courthouse in Istanbul
Families of victims killed on the Bosphorus bridge flash a four-finger sign called ‘the rabia’ as they arrive by bus at the Silivri prison courthouse in Istanbul

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