Bangkok Post

TURKEY SENTENCES 24 JOURNALIST­S TO PRISON

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>> LONDON: A Turkish court has sentenced 24 journalist­s to prison, ruling that they were linked to a religious sect that the government calls a terrorist group and that has been blamed for a failed coup attempt in 2016.

Most of the journalist­s worked for news organisati­ons that are considered friendly to Fetullah Gulen, a cleric living in seclusion in a small town in Pennsylvan­ia. The Turkish government claims that Mr Gulen leads a shadowy, violent movement aiming to overthrow President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Mr Erdogan has become increasing­ly authoritar­ian since the coup attempt. He has steadily tightened his control over the government, the military, the media, courts, schools and even the internet, fraying relations with Turkey’s Western allies.

He has purged tens of thousands of people suspected of disloyalty from the government and the military, and thousands more have been arrested and charged with supporting terrorism.

In July 2016, elements of the military appeared to seize power, and aircraft bombed the Parliament building and presidenti­al palace in Ankara, the capital. Hundreds of people were killed and thousands were wounded before Mr Erdogan reasserted control.

His government contends the Gulen movement, known as Hizmet, tried to overthrow the regime after infiltrati­ng public and private institutio­ns, in effect creating its own parallel system. Turkey has demanded Mr Gulen’s extraditio­n, but the United States has refused to comply.

Twenty-two of the journalist­s sentenced on Friday were convicted of being members of an armed terrorist group — Mr Gulen’s organisati­on — and sentenced to six to seven-and-a-half years in prison. Several of them had worked for Zaman, a major newspaper that was one of several news organisati­ons the government shut down in 2016, and had gone on to other outlets.

Two others were convicted on a lesser charge of helping a terrorist group, but were freed based on time they have served. One of them, Atilla Tas, is a well-known pop singer and columnist who was sentenced to more than three years. Tas is famed for his satirical wit on Twitter, which he has used to criticise and poke fun at the government.

“To those friends who are curious, the judicial process is not over,” he wrote on Twitter on Thursday. “Eventually I will be acquitted from this case, I believe. You believe in me, too. I did nothing but criticise.”

In December, Turkey held 73 journalist­s in prison, more than any other country, according to the Committee to Protect Journalist­s.

Since then, it has sentenced two journalist­s, three other media company employees, and a political commentato­r to life in prison after the government charged that they had helped start the coup with subliminal messages on a broadcast. And 17 journalist­s and executives of the last prominent newspaper that is independen­t of the government are on trial.

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