The Phnom Penh Post

Turkey fires 19K government employees

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TURKISH authoritie­s ordered the dismissal of more than 1 8 , 5 0 0 s t a t e e mpl oy e e s including police officers, soldiers and academics, in a decree published on Sunday.

The Official Gazette said 1 8 , 6 3 2 peopl e had been sacked including 8,998 police officers in the emergency decree over suspected links to t e r r o r o r g a ni s a t i o ns and g roups t hat “a c t a g a i ns t national security”.

Some 3,077 army soldiers were also dismissed as well as 1,949 air force personnel and 1,126 from the naval forces.

Another 1,052 civil servants from the justice ministry and linked institutio­ns have been fired as well as 649 from the gendarmeri­e and 192 from the coast guard.

State of emergency

Tu r k i s h u t h o r i t i e s a l s o s a c k e d 1 9 9 a c a d e mi c s , according to the new decree, while 148 state employees from the military and ministries were reinstated.

Turkey has been under a state of emergency since the July 2016 attempted overthrow of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Turkish media dubbed the decree as the “last” with officials indicating the state of emergency could end as early as Monday.

The emergency has been renewed seven times and the latest period is officially due to end on July 19.

Over 110,000 public sector employees have been removed previously from their jobs via emergency decrees since July 2016 while tens of thousands more have been suspended in a crackdown criticised by Ankara’s Western allies.

Gulen connection­s

Turkey accuses US-based Muslim preacher Fethullah Gulen of orchestrat­ing the attempted coup. The majority of those fired under the emergency are accused of links to Gulen.

The government refers to the movement as the “Fethullah Terrorist Organisati­on”. Gulen strongly denies any coup links and insists his movement i s a peace f ul organisati­on.

Sunday’s decree shut down 12 associatio­ns across the country as well as three newspapers and a television channel.

Human rights defenders including Amnesty Internatio­nal have lambasted the purges as arbitrary but Turkey says they are necessary to remove the Gulen movement’s infiltrati­on of state bodies.

Earlier this year, the government said more than 77,000 people had been arrested over alleged links to Gulen.

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