Sunday Independent (Ireland)

US AND TURKEY TALKING TOUGH

Who is the evangelica­l missionary thrust to centre of mounting diplomatic row between US and Turkey? Ezgi Erkoyun explains

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WHEN Andrew Brunson saw a police summons on the door of his Turkish home in late summer 2016, the US evangelica­l pastor thought it was a routine appointmen­t to sort out his residency papers in the country that had been his home for nearly a quarter of a century.

He went to the police station on October 7, 2016, was detained and later charged with involvemen­t in a coup attempt. He is still in detention and is now at the centre of a diplomatic row that has fuelled Turkey’s most serious currency crisis for almost two decades.

“Obviously he was more than surprised” to be detained, Brunson’s lawyer, Ismail Cem Halavurt, told reporters last Friday.

Brunson lived and preached in Izmir, a city on Turkey’s Aegean coast near some of the sites of Christiani­ty’s first communitie­s. At his first hearing in April, attended by Reuters, Brunson said he was “raising disciples for Jesus” in a country he deeply loved.

In July, after nearly two years in prison, Brunson was moved to house arrest. A court last Friday rejected an appeal to release him, saying evidence was still being collected and he posed a flight risk, according to a copy of the ruling seen by journalist­s.

US President Donald Trump has demanded Brunson’s unconditio­nal release, describing him as a “great patriot hostage”, and has slapped sanctions and tariffs on Turkey which have helped push the lira currency to record lows.

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan has linked Brunson’s release to the fate of Fethullah Gulen, a Turkish Muslim cleric living in the US whom he blames for the July 2016 coup attempt. Erdogan has raised tariffs on US cars, alcohol and tobacco in a tit-for-tat response.

“You have one pastor as well. Give Gulen to us... Then we will try Brunson and give him to you,” Erdogan said in a speech last September to police officers in Ankara. It is a suggestion Washington has dismissed.

The breakdown in relations between the two NATO allies has thrust Brunson’s case to internatio­nal prominence and made the 50-year-old American the unlikely centre of attention in a currency crisis that has shaken global emerging markets.

Turkish courts have rejected several appeals for Brunson to be freed and allowed to leave Turkey. A senior Turkish official, asked about the case, said that the judiciary is independen­t and the verdict is up to the courts.

Halavurt, Brunson’s lawyer, said the North Carolina pastor was not unduly alarmed when he first went to the police station. He expected at worst to be given a twoweek deadline to leave the country standard practice with residency violations — and to return to Turkey when his papers were sorted out. Instead, he was held in a detention centre for two months before being formally arrested on December 9, 2016.

He was charged with crimes committed on behalf of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), a Kurdish militant group which has waged a threedecad­e insurgency against the Turkish state, and on behalf of Gulen’s network, according to the indictment. Both are designated terrorist groups by Ankara.

He was also charged with disclosing state informatio­n “for political or military espionage”.

Brunson has denied all the charges against him.

His indictment, interviews with his lawyer, and three trial sessions show the accusation­s against Brunson centre around support for separatist Kurds and connection­s with alleged coup plotters.

“I came to Turkey in 1993 to tell people about Jesus,” he told the judge at his first hearing in April. Dressed in a black suit and white shirt, he spoke in fluent Turkish, ignoring the two court translator­s.

“I’ve never done something secretive in my time in Turkey. The government monitored us all the time but I’ve never done anything against Turkey,” he said.

The judge told Brunson he was not on trial for carrying out missionary activities but to face the charges against him.

Prosecutor­s questioned why he travelled hundreds of miles from his church on Turkey’s western coast to the mainly Kurdish southeast interior, where the PKK is active.

Messages on his phones, travel details, testimony from his congregati­on and what the indictment refers to as three secret witnesses, codenamed “Prayer”, “Fire” and “Meteor”, were cited in evidence against him.

The indictment cites GPS data showing trips to Suruc, near the Syrian border, and the mainly Kurdish city of Diyarbakir, as well as a meeting in 2010 with a man described by one of the secret witnesses as a US special forces soldier.

Brunson said his trips to Kurdish areas were to help refugees who had escaped war in neighbouri­ng Syria.

“I do not accept that I acted in accordance with PKK targets... We wanted to convert Syrian refugees coming to Izmir. I do not differenti­ate between their ethnic identities,” he said.

“Prayer”, the secret witness, was quoted in the indictment as saying Brunson was linked to prominent suspected members of Gulen’s network.

Halavurt said the witness had failed to offer concrete evidence of any such connection­s.

The prosecutio­n said in its indictment that Brunson’s phone records and witness testimony did establish the connection­s.

Turkey has detained 160,000 people since the abortive putsch, almost half of them formally charged and kept in jail during their trials.

Brunson was not in the country at the time of the coup attempt but returned soon afterwards, according to his lawyer. In a text message cited in the indictment, he said the coup attempt “was a shock”.

“We were waiting for some events that would shake the Turks — preparing the conditions for Jesus’s return... I think the situation is going to get worse. We’ll win in the end,” said the message, which was dated July 21, 2016 and addressed to a fellow pastor, according to the indictment.

Brunson did not deny sending the message but said it had been misunderst­ood, the indictment said.

In the Alsancak district of Izmir where Brunson lived, a pharmacy owner described him and his wife as “quiet people”.

The owner of a boutique two streets from his home said she never met him. “I know everyone in this neighbourh­ood and I had no idea these people lived here,” she said.

Turkey’s government says it was similarly unaware of Brunson until his case was raised by the US consulate.

Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said this month that the case was triggered by a criminal complaint filed by a translator who had worked for Brunson and denied that the pastor had been detained for use as a political pawn.

“What possible benefit could we get from this person?” Cavusoglu said at a meeting of Turkey’s ruling party in the southern coastal town of Alanya.

The senior Turkish official said negotiatio­ns had been held with US counterpar­ts “in different formats” but declined to comment further.

At a NATO summit in Brussels last month, Trump and Erdogan discussed Brunson. Trump thought he and his Turkish counterpar­t had agreed a deal to release the American pastor, according to two US sources.

Turkey has denied any such swap was agreed.

Erdogan had sought US help to persuade Israeli authoritie­s to release a Turkish woman being held in Israel, accused of ties to the Palestinia­n militant group Hamas. In exchange, Ankara would release Brunson, a senior White House official said.

Israel deported the Turkish detainee, Ebru Ozkan, on July 15 and later confirmed that Trump had requested her release. Ankara has denied ever agreeing to free Brunson in return.

Brunson’s transfer to house arrest 10 days later was deemed too little, too late by Washington and a phone call between the two leaders on July 26 “did not go well”, according to the American official.

Hours later, Trump announced sanctions against two Turkish government ministers.

“They should have given him back a long time ago, and Turkey has in my opinion acted very, very badly,” Trump told reporters at the White House on Friday, referring to Brunson.

Brunson’s next court hearing is scheduled for October.

‘I came to Turkey in 1993 to tell people about Jesus. I’ve never done something secretive in Turkey’

 ??  ?? FALLING OUT: Erdogan and Trump. Pastor Brunson (below)
FALLING OUT: Erdogan and Trump. Pastor Brunson (below)
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