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Over 10,000 sacked in new Turkey post-coup purge
By Raziye AKKOC
Ankara (AFP) Sept 2, 2016


Convicted editor says wife banned from leaving Turkey
Ankara (AFP) Sept 3, 2016 - The wife of the former editor-in-chief of Turkey's top opposition daily Cumhuriyet was banned on Saturday from flying to Germany and her passport seized, her husband said on Twitter.

Less than three weeks after Can Dundar stepped down from the paper, Dilek Dundar was told she could not fly to Berlin at Istanbul's Ataturk airport, the state-run news agency Anadolu said.

Her passport had been cancelled last month, Cumhuriyet added.

The agency said Dundar's passport was seized and she left after being told she could not leave the country.

Dundar was defiant on Twitter, saying he and his wife would not be intimidated.

"They took my wife hostage. Law of the jungle. But in vain. Neither I nor a woman who jumped on top of a gun can be frightened of this," he said, referring to an incident in May when his wife grappled with a gunman who tried to shoot her husband outside an Istanbul court.

Dundar was sentenced by the court in May to five years and 10 months in prison for allegedly revealing state secrets in a story that infuriated Turkey's authoritarian president Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Cumhuriyet's report on a shipment of arms intercepted at the Syrian border in January 2014 sparked a furore when it was published in May 2015, with Erdogan warning Dundar himself he would "pay a heavy price".

Dundar is believed to be in Germany after he was freed earlier this year pending an appeal following his trial.

Last month, he said he would not surrender himself to the Turkish courts because he had lost faith in the judiciary after the failed July 15 coup and the three-month state of emergency imposed in the days after.

"To trust such a judiciary would be like putting one's head under the guillotine," he wrote in a Cumhuriyet column entitled "time to say farewell".

"Therefore, I've decided not to surrender to this judiciary at least until the state of emergency is lifted."

Turkey has sacked another 10,000 police officers, judges, prosecutors and academics, according to a decree published Friday, as the state continued a purge within public services following July's failed coup.

A total of 7,669 police were dismissed in the latest swoop on suspected coup plotters or supporters, along with 323 personnel in the gendarmerie, which looks after domestic security.

A further 543 prosecutors and judges were also dismissed, bringing the total of those removed from the judiciary to 3,390, NTV channel reported.

The state's post-coup crackdown on higher education also continued, with 2,346 academics getting the sack, along with 28,000 others in education, including thousands of teachers.

Turkey accuses US-based Turkish cleric Fethullah Gulen and his Hizmet movement of ordering and implementing the failed putsch which left nearly 270 dead, including 24 coup-plotters.

Since then, tens of thousands of people within the judiciary, military, education system and police force have been removed, detained or arrested after being accused of links to Gulen's movement or the coup itself.

Scores of journalists have also been arrested.

Also Friday, the justice minister said tens of thousands of convicts who were jailed before the putsch had been freed, under an initiative apparently aimed at relieving pressure on prisons which are bursting with coup suspects.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan accuses Gulen of running a "parallel state" in Turkey and has vowed to rid the country of the "virus" of the preacher's influence.

Gulen, who has lived in self-imposed exile in the United States since 1999, strongly denies any involvement with the bid to overthrow Erdogan.

The EU and UN have criticised the Turkish crackdown, as well as the main opposition Republican People's Party (CHP) which has accused the government of "going too far."

To fill the gaping holes left in the judiciary, the state has invited judges and prosecutors who took early retirement to apply to return.

The latest sweep also involved the dismissal of more than 800 military personnel, most of whom were already under arrest.

A total of 4,451 military personnel have been sacked since July, including scores of generals.

- 34,000 convicts released -

Announcing the prisoner release, Justice Minister Bekir Bozdag said it involved people jailed for minor offences.

"As of yesterday evening, 33,838 prisoners and detainees have been released," Bozdag said during a ministerial meeting in Ankara led by Prime Minister Binali Yildirim that was broadcast live.

The government said it was not an amnesty and that it would not apply to those jailed for murder, terrorism or crimes against state security, nor would it involve any of those held in connection with the coup.

According to state-run Anadolu news agency, the total capacity of Turkey's prisons is 187,351 people.

Since July 15, the number of those in custody has swelled to more than 200,000.

Yildirim said that 40,000 people had been detained in July, of which 20,000 were remanded in custody.

The EU had criticised the crackdown and expressed alarms at reports of maltreatment of detained coup suspects.


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Previous Report
SUPERPOWERS
Turkey removes 8,000 security personnel in latest purge
Ankara (AFP) Sept 2, 2016
Turkey removed nearly 8,000 security personnel from duty late Thursday, according to state media, as the purge continued of those suspected of links to the July 15 failed coup. A total of 7,669 police were removed along with 323 personnel in the gendarmerie, which looks after domestic security. Turkey accuses US-based Muslim cleric Fethullah Gulen and his Hizmet (service) movement of ord ... read more


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