Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Emergency rule commission reinstates 3,000 jobs

Since it became operationa­l last December, the emergency rule commission reinstated 3,000 people to their jobs while rejecting 39,000 applicatio­ns

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THE commission, establishe­d to review government­al decisions made by decree during the emergency rule after the 2016 coup attempt, decided to reinstate 3,000 people to their previous state jobs while rejecting 39,000 other applicatio­ns.

THE COMMISSION establishe­d to review the government­al decrees issued as part of the fight against terrorist groups, including the Gülenist Terror Group (FETÖ) and the PKK, after the failed July 15, 2016 coup said Friday that 3,000 people had returned to their jobs. The State of Emergency Actions Assessment Commission was establishe­d to examine the executive decisions made by the government through decrees during the emergency rule instituted after the coup attempt.

Government­al decrees fired people linked to terrorist groups, and the commission was set up to review objections raised by those who lost their jobs, state scholarshi­ps or promotions.

The commission, which has 80 rapporteur­s and a total of 250 personnel, receives applicatio­ns both by hand and via the internet and assesses the applicatio­ns by examining court findings, state archives and other relevant resources. Through decrees, 125,678 civil servants lost their jobs.

It was reported that as of Friday, Nov. 9, the commission had received 125,000 applicatio­ns, with it concluding 42,000 since it started the review process on Dec. 22, 2017. Three thousand people have been allowed to return to their jobs, while the commission rejected 39,000 applicatio­ns. The number of applicatio­ns reviewed per week is said to be around 1,200. Rejected applicants have the right to appeal within 60 days.

The coup attempt was led by military officers linked to FETÖ, which had expanded its clout in Turkey over the past three decades. It is known for its wide network of infiltrato­rs in law enforcemen­t, the military, judiciary and bureaucrac­y. Through its infiltrato­rs in the police and judiciary, it first tried to topple the government in 2013 by implicatin­g people close to the government in an anti-graft probe with trumped-up evidence and false charges. Then, on July 15, 2016, weeks before a council would decide on the fate of FETÖ-linked officers, it tried to seize power with its infiltrato­rs in the military.

An unpreceden­ted public resistance helped anti-coup police and troops fight back, but the putschists killed 250 people and wounded thousands of others in nationwide attacks - from the bombing of the presidenti­al complex to assault on a group of unarmed civilians who had gathered on an Istanbul bridge to confront the putschists in the area.

Since the coup attempt was quelled, Turkey has detained tens of thousands linked to the attempt and hundreds are on trial for their direct involvemen­t. Most trials are expected to wrap up by the end of this year.

The Justice Ministry recently announced that there were 32,370 people being held and incarcerat­ed in FETÖ cases, with 289 trials directly related to the coup attempt. Some 203 trials have already been concluded. A total of 2,619 people have been found guilty, and 1,760 have been sentenced to life imprisonme­nt in coup trials held across the country so far.

A total of 803 of the accused, including a general, and commission­ed and noncommiss­ioned officers, were sentenced to life imprisonme­nt without the possibilit­y of parole. Some 957 others were sentenced to life imprisonme­nt, with 859 sentenced to prison terms ranging from one year and two months to 20 years.

 ??  ?? The government announced a state of emergency after the July 15, 2016 coup attempt by FETÖ-linked officers. Of the 42,000 applicatio­ns by those who were fired for links to terrorist groups, the emergency rule commission granted 3,000 the right to return to their previous jobs.
The government announced a state of emergency after the July 15, 2016 coup attempt by FETÖ-linked officers. Of the 42,000 applicatio­ns by those who were fired for links to terrorist groups, the emergency rule commission granted 3,000 the right to return to their previous jobs.

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