USA TODAY International Edition

Turkey insistent on cleric’s extraditio­n

State Dept. official counters that it is not an ‘ overnight process’

- Jessica Durando Contributi­ng: Gregg Zoroya in Mclean, Va.; Oren Dorell in Washington

Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim confirmed Tuesday an official request was sent to the United States for the extraditio­n of Fethullah Gulen, a suspect linked to Friday’s coup attempt, according to state- run media.

“We have sent four dossiers to the United States for the extraditio­n of the terrorist chief,” Turkish Prime Minister Birnili Yildirim said during the ruling Justice and Developmen­t Party meeting at the parliament in Ankara, Anadolu Agency reported.

Mark Toner, deputy spokesman at the State Department, said Turkey on Tuesday morning sent the State Department materials “which we are in the process of analyzing under the treaty” that governs extraditio­n requests.

“I am not in position at this point in time to judge whether they constitute a formal extraditio­n request,” Toner said. “There’s a well- defined process in place that govern these types of actions.” He added that this was not an “overnight process” and that he did not want to comment on the documents until “we determine they constitute a formal extraditio­n request.”

White House spokesman Josh Earnest said the materials would be reviewed by the Department­s of State and Justice.

President Obama spoke by phone Tuesday with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, reiteratin­g the United States’ commitment to the democratic­ally elected government of Turkey but also urging that those arrested in the wake of the coup attempt be afforded their rights of due process under the Turkish Constituti­on, Earnest said.

Gulen has denied allegation­s that he was involved in the coup attempt and told reporters that he would have tried to stop any takeover had he known about it.

“I condemn and reject in the strongest terms the attempted coup,” Gulen, 77, said in an interview Monday with USA TODAY and several other reporters.

Secretary of State John Kerry said Monday that if an extraditio­n request for Gulen was made, the U. S. would agree to it only if there were compelling proof of wrongdoing by the cleric.

“We need to see genuine evidence that withstands the standard of scrutiny that exists in many countries’ system of law with respect to the issue of extraditio­n,” Kerry said. “If it meets that standard, there’s nothing — there’s no interest we have in standing in the way of appropriat­ely honoring the treaty that we have with Turkey.”

Earnest said Monday that “the suggestion that somehow the United States is harboring Mr. Gulen is factually incorrect.”

Turkish Deputy Prime Minister Numan Kurtulmus said there are 9,322 suspects involved in the coup attempt and all are going through legal procedures, Kurtulmus said.

A thousand pro- government protesters rallied in Istanbul on Tuesday, waving flags and demanding the death penalty for those involved with the coup, the Associated Press reported.

The Supreme Council of Radio and Television also canceled licenses of 24 Gulen- linked broadcaste­rs — including Samanyolu, Can Erzincan television and Dunya Radio, the agency said.

Erdogan, who beat down the attempted coup by Saturday morning, has rounded up and dismissed thousands of members of the military, police and judiciary he accuses of being followers of Gulen and plotting against Turkey’s democratic­ally elected government.

Turkey’s Board of Higher Education requested resignatio­ns from 1,577 university deans. Of the deans dismissed, 1,176 worked in public universiti­es and 401 in private institutio­ns, Anadolu reported Tuesday.

Gulen, a former political ally of Erdogan, preaches a moderate form of Islam and has lived in self- exile in Pennsylvan­ia since 1999. His followers run a network of charter schools and cultural centers in the United States and are prolific political donors.

“There’s no interest we have in standing in the way of appropriat­ely honoring the treaty that we have with Turkey” if there is proof of wrongdoing. Secretary of State John Kerry

 ?? OREN DORELL, USA TODAY ?? Turkish cleric Fethullah Gulen, who lives in Pennsylvan­ia, said Monday, “I condemn and reject in the strongest terms the attempted coup.”
OREN DORELL, USA TODAY Turkish cleric Fethullah Gulen, who lives in Pennsylvan­ia, said Monday, “I condemn and reject in the strongest terms the attempted coup.”

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