Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Senior figures, leader of FETÖ on trial in critical lawsuit

The first hearing in the case of 71 defendants affiliated with FETÖ, including its leader and key figures, is underway in Ankara. Many people are calling this the main trial of the group’s leadership

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with lawyers for the government, the brother of Ali Tatar, a military officer who committed suicide after being found guilty in a sham trial blamed on FETÖ’s judiciary and police infiltrato­rs, attended the first hearing.

The trial is expected to continue for a long time as most defendants remain at large. Several defendants, meanwhile, were already sentenced in other FETÖrelate­d trials. In the first hearing, the court rejected requests by the defendants’ lawyers to lift sanctions on the assets of defendants that were seized as part of legal proceeding­s. The hearing was adjourned to an unspecifie­d date.

Defendants face a wide variety of charges; an indictment against them says they planned to overthrow the government, take over state institutio­ns and replace constituti­onal order with “a totalitari­an oligarchy.”

The most prominent name in the case is Fetullah Gülen. Already a prime suspect in dozens of trials on the 2016 coup attempt and other FETÖ-related cases, Gülen will likely die in prison if convicted, due to a string of life sentences prosecutor­s want for him.

The 77-year-old Gülen, who patiently built his network of Gülenists for decades and planted them into the army, law enforcemen­t, judiciary and bureaucrac­y, left Turkey in 1999 while his movement, known as “Hizmet” then, was still being recognized as a charity with religious un- dertones.

Since then, he has lived in the United States, where occasional­ly gives interviews from his sprawling compound in Pennsylvan­ia. Turkey has repeatedly asked for his extraditio­n from the United States but Washington has apparently dragged the process, refusing to recognize FETÖ as a terrorist group. Several defendants in the case stay with Gülen in his compound and according to prosecutor­s, are senior cadre of FETÖ. Most were in the United States for years while others fled there shortly before the 2016 coup attempt and some fled after the coup attempt that paved the way for a wider crackdown on the terrorist group.

Adil Öksüz, one of the most significan­t names in the case, is also a key figure in the coup-related trials. Unlike Gülen, the whereabout­s of Öksüz are not known, but he is believed to be in hiding in Europe. Referred to as the “black box” of FETÖ by the media, Öksüz, originally a theology professor, acted as the terrorist group’s point man for its infiltrato­rs in the military.

Eyewitness accounts and investigat­ions show he gathered top military of- ficers involved in the coup attempt in a villa in Ankara days before the coup attempt and together they planned how to execute the coup plot. “Our elder sends his greetings,” he told those present at the villa, one of the officers who attended the meetings, would later tell a court, in reference to Fetullah Gülen.

Öksüz was among several civilians captured in Akıncı and has claimed he was “checking out a plot of land” he planned to buy near the base. He was released hours later by the court that was presided by a judge - who was later tried on charges of helping Öksüz - and was last seen in Sakarya, the northweste­rn province he worked in. A nationwide manhunt was launched to capture him but a police chief in charge of the manhunt, later detained for links to FETÖ, was accused of ignoring tip-offs for the capture of Öksüz. Media reports say he fled to Germany and was aided by fellow Gülenists giving him accommodat­ion there.

Akın İpek, who used to head a familyowne­d conglomera­te in Turkey, is among the key financiers of the terrorist group. İpek is currently in the United Kingdom where a trial for his extraditio­n to Turkey is in process. He is currently sought by Turkish authoritie­s for “managing a terror group, financing terrorism, embezzleme­nt and spreading propaganda for a terror group.” İpek left Turkey prior to the seizure of his Koza Holding by court order in October 2015. He lost lawsuits he filed in U.K. courts for the return of his assets seized by Turkey. İpek’s brother, Cafer İpek, and mother, Melek İpek, are among the 45 defendants currently on trial in Turkey for FETÖ links with his business conglomera­te.

Also on trial is Şerif Ali Tekalan, who was president of a university linked to FETÖ in the past. Tekalan currently serves as head of a FETÖ-linked school in the United States. Hidayet Karaca, another defendant in the case, was the chairman of a broadcasti­ng group run by Gülenists and was sentenced to life imprisonme­nt in another FETÖ case. Most of the other defendants in the case are described as “imams,” handlers for the terrorist group’s infiltrato­rs, such as Osman Hilmi Özdil, who was allegedly chief handler for FETÖ infiltrato­rs in law enforcemen­t.

 ??  ?? Fetullah Gülen, the leader of FETÖ, faces multiple life sentences for the 2016 coup attempt that killed 251 people.
Fetullah Gülen, the leader of FETÖ, faces multiple life sentences for the 2016 coup attempt that killed 251 people.

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