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Turkey: Detained US Pastor Brunson Vilified by State-Supporting Media

July 29, 2018 By administrator

by Uzay Bulut,

It appears that Pastor Andrew Brunson, as both an American and a Christian, has become a perfect scapegoat for the Turkish government and its media outlets. If Ankara were a genuine ally of the West, Brunson — who lived and worked peacefully at a small Protestant church in Izmir for 23 years — would not have been arrested in the first place, let alone robbed of his freedom and prevented from returning to the US.

Andrew Brunson, the American pastor detained in Turkey for two years on false terrorism and espionage charges, was released from prison on July 25, only to be put under house arrest until the resumption of his trial in October. The court ordered him to wear an electronic ankle-bracelet at all times and banned him from traveling outside Turkey.

Moreover, according to the Washington Post‘s Carol D. Leonnig:

“President Trump thought he had a deal with Turkish President Erdogan to free Andrew Brunson, the American pastor imprisoned in Turkey for the last two years on what the administration considered bogus terrorism charges.

“As part of the deal, on July 14, Trump asked Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu to release Ebru Ozkan, 27, a Turkish woman who was detained in Israel on charges of acting as a smuggler for Hamas. The day after Trump and Netanyahu spoke, Ozkan was deported from Israel.

“Several U.S. officials insisted there had been no misunderstanding of the terms of the deal, but the Turks, transferring Brunson to house arrest, failed to send the pastor home.”

Brunson, detained in October 2016, is accused, with no evidence, of working for two groups that Turkey lists as terrorist organizations. One is a movement led by the US-based Muslim cleric Fethullah Gülen, referred to by the Turkish government as the Fethullahist Terrorist Organization (FETO), and whom President Recep Tayyip Erdogan accuses of organizing the failed military coup attempt in July 2016. The other is the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK). If convicted, Brunson faces up to 35 years behind bars.

Erdogan has made it clear that his intention is to make the US administration extradite Gülen in exchange for Brunson’s release. In September 2017, Erdogan said:

“America wants us to return a priest… You also have a priest. You should give him to us too. Then we will try and return the one here.”

Brunson’s 62-page indictment states, among other allegations:

“The suspect… under the guise of being an evangelical church pastor… acted as an agent of unconventional warfare, per the doctrine of intelligence and psychological warfare and… acted within a group of personnel, most of whom had received special training and had military and intelligence backgrounds.”

Brunson’s release to house arrest came a week after US President Donald Trump posted a message on Twitter calling Brunson’s detention “a total disgrace” and urging Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan to “do something to free this wonderful Christian husband & father.”

On July 26, the White House threatened to impose sanctions on Turkey if it fails immediately to return Brunson to the United States. Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu responded angrily on Twitter: “Noone dictates Turkey. We will never tolerate threats from anybody. Rule of law is for everyone; no exception.”

Members of the pro-government media in Turkey have been demonizing Brunson since his arrest two years ago. In May 2017, for instance, the newspaper Takvim referred to him as an “imposter-spy,” adding:

“Brunson worked as a military officer in the American army and supported both the FETO and the PKK… Meanwhile, he quickly rose in the ranks of the CIA… There have been claims that if the [coup] had been successful, Brunson would have been appointed head of the CIA.”

During a July 15, 2018 panel discussion on CNN Turk, Nedim Şener — a columnist for the newspaper Posta — accused Brunson of “aim[ing] to Christianize Kurds,” and claimed that “Brunson’s computer contains the names of CIA agents.” Şener added, “Brunson denies all of these things, but this is an attitude of FETO that we are familiar with.”

In a July 27 article entitled “Arrest the Priest Again,” the pro-Erdogan newspaper Yeni Safak wrote:

“That Priest Brunson, who has been tried for committing crimes on behalf of FETO and the PKK, was released yesterday and put under house arrest has received negative reactions from the public and the exorbitant threats coming from the US have been the last straw. The best response to Trump’s words, ‘We will impose large sanctions on Turkey,’ will be to put the priest in jail again, just as he deserves.”

In a July 27 column in the news outlet Aydinlik, author Ceyhun Bozkurt at first claimed that many missionaries in Turkey had a secret agenda to cause chaos in and Christianize the country. He wrote, in part:

“Missionaries continued their plans against Turkey in the 2000s, as well. In 2006, they carried out their activities by partitioning Turkey into 11 regions….

“Since 1800s, the unconventional warfare methods of missionaries who entered the Anatolian region have been effective in starting Turkish-Armenian conflicts, Bulgarian rebellions and Kurdish nationalistic movements. The missionaries who worked for their head organization, the American BOARD, provoked Armenians and Bulgarians and forced Kurds to rebel by Christianizing them through organizations they established, such as schools and hospitals… For about 200 years, we have faced too many Brunsons who were much more than pastors, and we will continue facing them.”

He then, however, appears to call for respect for the rule of law:

“What is important is to engage in a political struggle against them in a correct and lawful way.”

Then there is Ahmet Hakan, a Brunson critic and a well-known columnist. In a piece for the newspaper Hurriyet on July 27, Hakan stated that Turkey “should not bow down to the threats from the US… After this rampage, Brunson should not be told: ‘You are free, you can go.'”

It appears that Brunson, as both an American and a Christian, has become a perfect scapegoat for the Turkish government and its media outlets. If Ankara were a genuine ally of the West, Brunson — who has lived and worked peacefully at a small Protestant church in Izmir for 23 years — would not have been arrested in the first place, let alone robbed of his freedom and prevented from returning to the US.

Let us hope that the Trump administration’s threats of sanctions will be effective in securing Brunson’s release.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: detained, Pastor Brunson, US

Breaking: Yerevan National Security Service detained Vachagan Ghazaryan

June 25, 2018 By administrator

Vachagan Ghazaryan

The National Security Service has detained former First Deputy Head of RA State Protection Service Vachagan Ghazaryan. Samson Galstyan, the head of the press center of the National Security Service, confirmed the news in a conversation with “Armenpress”.

“There is such a thing, I confirm that information. We’ll deliver a message later, “said Galstyan.

ԱԱԾ-ն բերման է ենթարկել Վաչագան Ղազարյանին

ԵՐԵՎԱՆ, 25 ՀՈՒՆԻՍԻ, ԱՐՄԵՆՊՐԵՍ: Ազգային անվտանգության ծառայությունը բերման է ենթարկել ՀՀ պետական պահպանության ծառայության պետի նախկին առաջին տեղակալ Վաչագան Ղազարյանին: «Արմենպրես»-ի հետ զրույցում լուրը հաստատեց ՀՀ ԱԱԾ մամուլի կենտրոնի պետ Սամսոն Գալստյանը:

«Կա նման բան, ես հաստատում եմ այդ տեղեկատվությունը: Ավելի ուշ հանդես կգանք հաղորդագրությամբ»,- ասաց Գալստյանը:

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: detained, Vachagan Ghazaryan

Armenian police break up protests after PM rejects demands to quit

April 22, 2018 By administrator

Armenian police detained three opposition leaders

Armenian police detained three opposition leaders

YEREVAN (Reuters) – Armenian police detained three opposition leaders on Sunday and dispersed some protesters on the 10th day of demonstrations against the appointment of former President Serzh Sarksyan as prime minister, an opposition politician and witnesses said.

Protesters accuse Sarksyan of clinging to power after he was appointed premier this month following 10 years as president. Tens of thousands of opponents have marched through Yerevan, blocking streets in the city center and staging sit-ins.

Police said in a statement that opposition politician Nikol Pashinyan and two other lawmakers had been “forcibly removed” from the protest but had not been arrested. It also said it had started to disperse protesters “guided by the law.”

The statement was issued shortly after Pashinyan held talks with Sarksyan, who walked out of the meeting after accusing his opponents of trying to “blackmail” the authorities.

One of the protest leaders, Ararat Mirzoyan, wrote on his Facebook page that he had been “illegally detained” along with Pashinyan and a third opposition politician, as well as other protesters.

A Reuters witness said police armed with batons and shields cleared at least one area of the capital where protests had been taking place, but demonstrators remained in other areas.

At his brief meeting on Sunday with Pashinyan, Sarkysan had said: “This is not talks, not a dialogue, it’s just an ultimatum, blackmail of the state, of the legitimate authorities.”

He said his opponents “did not learn the lesson of March 1”, referring to a protest rally after his re-election in 2008 when 10 people were killed in clashes with police.

Parliament voted on Tuesday to allow Sarksyan to become premier.

Under a revised constitution approved in a 2015 referendum, most state powers in the small, ex-Soviet state have shifted to the prime minister while the presidency has become a largely ceremonial post.

“No one has dared and will dare speak to us in the language of threats. I am telling you: you have no understanding of the situation in the country. The situation is different to the one you knew 15-20 days ago,” Pashinyan had told Sarksyan on Sunday.

“The situation in Armenia has changed, you don’t have the power of which you are told. In Armenia, the power has passed to the people,” he said.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Armenian, detained, opposition leaders, police

Turkish PM’s chief advisor detained over suspected Gulen links

June 3, 2017 By administrator

advisor detained over suspected Gulen links  Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim’s chief advisor was detained over his suspected links to the Fethullahist Terrorist Organization (FETÖ), widely believed to have been masterminded the July 15, 2016, failed coup attempt, Hurriyet Daily News reports. 

Yildirim’s chief advisor Birol Erdem, who was a justice ministry undersecretary previously, and his wife Gülümser Erdem were detained early on June 3 in Ankara as part of an investigation carried out by Ankara Chief Public Prosecutor’s Office.

Erdem testified as witness as part of an investigation launched for the followers of the US-based Islamic preacher Fethullah Gulen last year.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: advisor, detained, Gulen .links

Istanbul: Dink case judge Bunyamin Karakash detained over Gulen probe

December 3, 2016 By administrator

Bünyamin Karakaş, one of the judges trying suspects of Hrant Dink’s murder, was arrested on Dec. 2, 2016 (Source: Hurriyet Daily News)

Bünyamin Karakaş, one of the judges trying suspects of Hrant Dink’s murder, was arrested on Dec. 2, 2016 (Source: Hurriyet Daily News)

One of the judges who is trying 35 suspects for the murder of Armenian-Turkish journalist Hrant Dink in 2007 was detained on December 2 on accusations that he is tied to the Gülenist organization.
Bunyamin Karakash, who did not attend the Friday hearing, was apprehended by police teams while he was in his room at the Istanbul courthouse. The detention came during a recess in the hearing in which suspect Ramazan Akyürek was in the dock, Hurriyet Daily News reports.
The court, gathering after the short break, decided to adjourn its meeting for two hours due to Karakaş’s detention.
Karakash was among 192 judges and prosecutors who were sought for detention as part of a probe into Gulenists opened by Ankara prosecutors on December 1.
Some 55 of the legal personnel were serving in Istanbul.

A total of 191 judges and prosecutors out of the 192 were suspended as part of the investigation, said a judicial source.
No administrative actions were taken against one suspect because he had retired although he remains on a wanted list.
The suspects were said to be serving at first-degree courts.
To date, more than 3,600 judges and prosecutors have been dismissed since the July 15 coup attempt that left 248 dead and nearly 2,200 wounded.
The Gulenist organization, led by US-based Islamic preacher Fethullah Gülen, is accused of orchestrating Turkey’s July 15 coup plot.
In the Dink case, hearings against former Police Intelligence Department personnel began on November 28.
Dink was shot dead at the age of 52 in broad daylight outside the offices of the Turkish-Armenian weekly newspaper Agos in central Istanbul on January 19, 2007.
Ogun Samast, then a 17-year-old jobless high-school dropout, confessed to the murder and was sentenced to almost 23 years in jail in 2011.
But the case grew into a wider scandal after it emerged that the security forces had been aware of a plot to kill Dink but failed to act.

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: Bunyamin Karakash, detained, dink, Judge, Turkey

Erdogan rounding up foreign Journalist BBC, Voice of America Detained in Turkey

November 27, 2016 By administrator

bbc-voc-detainA BBC Turkish reporter Hatice Kamer was detained on Saturday when he went to the Sirvan town in southeastern Siirt Province to meet with the relatives of copper mine collapse victims, while a Voice of America (VOA) journalist was also arrested in the Turkish city of Diyarbakir on Saturday, according to media reports.

MOSCOW (Sputnik) — A BBC Turkish reporter has been detained in the southeastern Turkish city of Sirvan, media reported Sunday. According to the Hurriyet newspaper, Hatice Kamer was detained on Saturday when he went to the Sirvan town in southeastern Siirt Province to meet with the relatives of copper mine collapse victims. The authorities reportedly provided no reason for the detention.

According to the reports, a Voice of America (VOA) journalist was also detained in the Turkish city of Diyarbakir on Saturday.

At least 10 bodies have been recovered from the copper mine that collapsed due to prolonged rains on November 17. After military attempted to overthrow government in July 2016 massive purges swept through Turkey, with many newspapers shut and journalists arrested. Earlier this month, a french reporter was arrested and deported from the country.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: BBC, detained, Journalist, Turkey, VOA

Turkish journalist, academic detained over coup attempt

September 10, 2016 By administrator

ahmet-altan-arrestProminent journalist Ahmet Altan and his brother, academic and columnist Mehmet Altan, were detained on Sept. 10 for questioning.

Announcing the detentions, Istanbul-based Platform for Independent Journalism (P24) said the reason for the detentions was “Altan brothers’ statements on a TV show before the July 15 failed coup attempt in Turkey”,

Ahmet Altan, a prominent novelist and former editor-in-chief of daily Taraf, is also on trial along with his colleagues for “leaking state secrets” for stories on an alleged coup plan by the Turkish military.

Meanwhile, Hürriyet reporter Arda Akin, who had been arrested for alleged links to the Fethullah Gulen network, accused of masterminding the July 15 coup attempt, was released pending trial late on Sept. 9.

More than 100 journalists have been arrested since July 15 in the probe against followers of the US-based Islamic preacher Fethullah Gulen.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: detained, journalist Ahmet Altan, Turkey

26 peaceful protesters detained in Armenia’s capital as police provoke fresh violence

July 30, 2016 By administrator

protestors arrestIn the wake of the late Friday night clashes in Yerevan’s Khorenatsi street, 26 out of the 165 individuals taken to police precincts have been detained, police sources say.
A total of 60 others were hospitalized with different bodily injuries.

Also, plain-clothes individuals beat journalists providing a live coverage of the events.

A spokesperson for the Police, Ashot Aharonyan, said in a post on Facebook after that the riot police had to take special measures to stop the crowd from breaking through their barricades.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: detained, peaceful, protesters, Yerevan

Armenia police: 64 citizens detained after night incident in Yerevan’s Khorenatsi street

July 27, 2016 By administrator

64 citizensYEREVAN. – 64 citizens have been detained after the march in Yerevan’s Khorenatsi street on suspicion of illegal possession of weapons, ammunition and explosives, the police press-service informed Armenian News – NEWS.am.

“63 of them have been released, while one is detained, since drum-type weapons have been found in his possession,” the police informed.

As reported earlier, the situation at night was tense. On Wednesday night, the Armenian police announced about a shootout which took place in the territory of the police regiment seized by Sasna Tsrer armed group. As a result, a law enforcement officer, as well as Sasna Tsrer armed group members Pavel Manukyan and his son Aram were wounded.  All three were immediately hospitalized. Besides, the police informed that two members of the group have surrendered.

For their part, Sansa Tsrer armed group announced that “the police have attacked the territory of the regiment; Pavel Manukyan, Aram Manukyan, Gevorg Iritsyan and probably other members of the group have been wounded. The police have taken Pavel, Aram, Gagik Yeghiazaryan and one more member of the group.”

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenia, citizens, detained

Turkey says 103 generals, admirals detained after Turkey’s failed coup attempt

July 18, 2016 By administrator

103 general suspendedA total of 103 generals and admirals have been detained for questioning across Turkey over the failed coup attempt on July 15, as part of an operation that included crucial military seats, while operations on some army headquarters continued on July 18.

Anadolu Agency said 41 of the detained high-ranking soldiers were jailed pending trial as of the afternoon of July 18.

The commander of the 2nd Army, Gen. Adem Huduti, and its executive officer and Malatya Garrison Commander, Maj. Gen. Avni Angun, were among the arrested ranking generals.

Former Air Force Commander Gen. Akın Öztürk, who has been described as the ringleader of the foiled uprising, was also arrested.

As part of the operations on alleged coup attempters, police teams entered the Air Force Academy in the Yeşilköy neighborhood in Istanbul’s Bakırköy district on July 18, detaining four soldiers, including a colonel.
According to sources, 25 generals and officers held a secret meeting at the campus and removed surveillance cameras and computer hard disks afterwards.

A cell phone belonging to the academy’s commander, Maj. Gen. Fethi Alpay, was reportedly found in a trash bin.

Alpay was detained and additional technical personnel were dispatched to the academy to remove batteries from planes and helicopters located at the school’s field in order to prevent their unauthorized use.

Sources also said some weapons were removed from the academy’s ammunition depot.

Police and prosecutors also initiated an inspection at the İncirlik Air Base in the southern province of Adana, a key spot from where the U.S.-based coalition is conducting operations against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) in Syria.

The base’s Turkish commander, Brig. Gen. Bekir Ercan, was arrested earlier over alleged involvement in the coup attempt.

July/18/2016

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: detained, generals, Turkey

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