Turkish PM warns against revenge

Turkish PM warns against revenge

July 20, 2016
Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan addresses his supporters gathered in front of his residence in Istanbul, early Tuesday. — AP
Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan addresses his supporters gathered in front of his residence in Istanbul, early Tuesday. — AP

Ankara — Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim on Tuesday warned against exacting revenge on supporters of the failed coup, as Ankara arrested top generals.

President Tayyip Erdogan has denounced the coup bid, which left more than 300 dead on all sides, as a treacherous bid to oust him from power devised from the US compound of his arch-enemy Fethullah Gulen.

An Ankara court late Monday placed under arrest 26 former generals suspected of planning Friday’s attempted power grab, including former Air Force chief Gen. Akin Ozturk, whom some Turkish media have painted as the mastermind of the plot.

In his statement to prosecutors, Ozturk denied he was the coup ringleader.
“I am not the person who planned or led the coup. Who planned it and directed it, I do not know,” state-run news agency Anadolu quoted him as saying.

Anadolu published images of Ozturk and other suspects on the stairs inside the Ankara courthouse, staring blankly into the camera with their hands tied behind their backs.

“Nobody can have a feeling of revenge. This is unacceptable in a state governed by rule of law,” Prime Minister Yildirim said after meeting secular opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) leader Kemal Kilicdaroglu.

The interior ministry said almost 9,000 people, including nearly 8,000 police but also municipal governors and other officials, had also been dismissed in a widening purge.

Turkey has blamed Friday’s events on supporters within the military of Gulen, who Ankara accused of running a group it dubs the “Fetullahci Terror Organization” (FETO).

Ankara has piled the pressure on Washington to extradite Gulen to face trial at home but US Secretary of State John Kerry said Monday he wanted to see evidence and not allegations.

Yildirim said Tuesday that Turkey had sent four dossiers to the United States over Gulen’s alleged links to the overthrow plot.

The reclusive cleric said in an interview with several media outlets including AFP at his compound in the US state of Pennsylvania that he has “no concerns personally” about the extradition request.

“The rule of law reigns supreme here. I don’t believe this government will pay attention to anything that is not legally sound,” he said.

He called the putsch attempt “treason, a betrayal of the Turkish nation.”

Erdogan told CNN in his first media interview since the coup bid that he would approve any decision by parliament to reintroduce capital punishment.

“There is a clear crime of treason,” he said.

Erdogan has remained in Istanbul ever since he dramatically flew back on Saturday to the city from the holiday resort of Marmaris where he was staying when the coup struck.

It was unclear when he would be returning to the capital Ankara. Every night since the coup he has spoken to supporters in the Istanbul district of Kisikli, where he has a home, urging them to maintain a “vigil” for democracy.

Erdogan told CNN his life had been in grave danger. “If I stayed (in Marmaris) 10, 15 minutes more, I would either have been killed or kidnapped and taken away by them.”

Yildirim said 208 people were killed during the coup bid, including 145 civilians, 60 police and three loyalist soldiers. The military said 104 coup plotters were killed.

In an intriguing twist, a Turkish official said two Turkish pilots who played a role in the downing of a Russian plane in November that led to a crisis in ties between Moscow and Ankara are in custody over the failed coup.


July 20, 2016
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