Kuwait Times

Turkey detains generals, journalist­s in widening purge post-coup

Warns against witch hunt

-

Turkey’s opposition leader yesterday warned against a government witch hunt following the failed coup in the country, saying it would cast a shadow on the democracy which those who opposed the insurrecti­on tried to protect.

In an interview with The Associated Press, Kemal Kilicdarog­lu also said the United States should extradite a US-based Muslim cleric whom the government accuses of being behind the failed July 15 uprising.

“Those who are innocent should not be thrown into the fire with those who are guilty,” said Kilicdarog­lu, leader of the pro-secular main opposition Republican People’s Party. “The start of a witch hunt would cast a shadow on the struggle that is being led for democracy.”

Turkey has detained more than 13,000 people in the military, judiciary and other institutio­ns in a purge in the wake of the attempted coup which killed about 290 people. Tens of thousands of others have been suspended from their jobs in sectors including education, health care, municipali­ties and even at the Turkish national airline. Those who have been purged are accused of ties to the movement led by USbased cleric Fethullah Gulen, although their direct links to the coup attempt is not clear. Gulen has denied any part in the foiled uprising by a faction within Turkey’s military.

‘Top Afghanista­n general held’

On Tuesday, two Turkish generals serving in Afghanista­n and a former Istanbul governor were detained as part of the crackdown. The two generals were caught in Dubai, while the governor, Huseyin Avni Mutlu, who served from 20102014, was detained in Istanbul, an official at the office of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said. The official spoke on condition of anonymity in line with regulation­s on speaking to the media.

In another crackdown, police and prosecutor­s searched the Istanbul-based naval academy, an official said. At least 110 Culture and Tourism Ministry employees were suspended and detention warrants were issued for 29 lawyers in the central Turkish city of Konya, the state-run Anadolu Agency reported.

Police on Tuesday also detained two more journalist­s a day after authoritie­s issued warrants for the detention of 42 journalist­s, many of them who had worked for Gulen-linked media.

Kilicdarog­lu cautioned that authoritie­s should act within the law and pursue only those linked to the coup plot. “Are those who carried out the coup attempt guilty? Yes. The real culprits must be found,” Kilicdarog­lu said. “If we go out of the norms of the law, then we are no different to the coup-plotters.”

“The detention of journalist­s is not a pretty developmen­t,” Kilicdarog­lu added. “If they have direct ties to the coup, that’s a different matter. But the detention or arrest of a journalist for expressing opinions, for covering an issue is not right.” Kilicdarog­lu said he backed the government’s efforts for Gulen’s extraditio­n from the United States. “It has been expressed that Fethullah Gulen was at the center of the coup attempt. It has been expressed that evidence (against Gulen) will be brought to light. If there is such an incident, then naturally Fethullah Gulen must be returned to Turkey,” he said.

Gulen himself insisted in an opinion piece he wrote for the New York Times, that he had nothing to do with the coup and had denounced it from the start, and called on the US to reject Turkey’s extraditio­n request for him.

“Turkey’s president is blackmaili­ng the United States by threatenin­g to curb his country’s support for the internatio­nal coalition against the Islamic State. His goal: to ensure my extraditio­n, despite a lack of credible evidence and virtually no prospect for a fair trial. The temptation to give Mr. Erdogan whatever he wants is understand­able. But the United States must resist it,” Gulen wrote.

“For the sake of worldwide efforts to restore peace in turbulent times, as well as to safeguard the future of democracy in the Middle East, the United States must not accommodat­e an autocrat who is turning a failed putsch into a slowmotion coup of his own against constituti­onal government,” Gulen said.

Gulen said that despite his “unequivoca­l protest, similar to statements issued by all three of the major opposition parties (denouncing the coup), Turkey’s increasing­ly authoritar­ian president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, immediatel­y accused me of orchestrat­ing the putsch.” He insisted his philosophy was one of “inclusive and pluralist Islam” that rejected armed rebellion and espoused the respect of all regardless of religious or political views or ethnic origins. “In Turkey, the Erdogan government’s shift toward a dictatorsh­ip is polarizing the population along sectarian, political, religious and ethnic lines,fueling the fanatics,” Gulen wrote. —AP

 ??  ?? ANKARA: Pro-government supporters protest against the attempted coup, on the road leading to Istanbul’s iconic Bosporus Bridge on Thursday. —AP
ANKARA: Pro-government supporters protest against the attempted coup, on the road leading to Istanbul’s iconic Bosporus Bridge on Thursday. —AP
 ??  ?? LONDON: London Mayor Sadiq Khan (2L) poses with Brad Simpson (L) James McVey (2R) and Connor Ball (R), members of British band “The Vamps”, to mark Internatio­nal Busking Day on Friday. —AFP
LONDON: London Mayor Sadiq Khan (2L) poses with Brad Simpson (L) James McVey (2R) and Connor Ball (R), members of British band “The Vamps”, to mark Internatio­nal Busking Day on Friday. —AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait