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Turkish prosecutors demand two life sentences for Gulen

August 16, 2016 By administrator

life-sentencesTurkish prosecutors have demanded two life sentences and an additional 1,900 years in prison for US-based cleric, Fethullah Gulen, whom Ankara blames for the failed mid-July coup.

In a 2,527-page indictment approved by prosecutors in the Usak region of western Turkey, the Pennsylvania-based cleric is charged with “attempting to destroy the constitutional order by force,” Turkey’s Anadolu news agency reported on Tuesday.

According to the indictment, the cleric also faces criminal charges for “forming and running an armed terrorist group” among other accusations.

The case dates back even before the abortive coup and had been launched by Usak prosecutor’s office into the financial assets of the so-called Fethullah Terror Organization (FETO).

FETO has been accused of infiltrating state archives through its members in the state institutions and intelligence units.

Turkish state media say the group has used media outlets, foundations, private schools, companies, student dormitories and insurance companies to serve its purpose of taking control of all state institutions. FETO has also collected funds from businessmen in the name of “donations” and transferred the money to the United States by means of front companies.

At least 13 out of 111 suspects in the case are remanded in custody, all facing prison terms ranging from two years to life in jail.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Gulen, life, sentences, Turkey

Ha Ha Erdogan You can fool your Zombi Turks But not the smart world.

August 15, 2016 By administrator

Ha Ha Erdogan, You can fool your Zombi Turks  But not the smart world. It was Erdogan 4 hour stage
Coup Admit it.

http://gagrule.net/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/ha-ha-erdogan.mp4

 

Filed Under: Articles, Interviews, Videos Tagged With: coup, Erdogan, Gulen, Turkey

Berlin mayor accuses Turkey of waging war on Gulen supporters in Germany

August 14, 2016 By administrator

berlin-turkeyMayor Michael Müller has accused Ankara of extending its post-coup crackdown to Germany. The Turkish president has accused a US-based activist of initiating the coup.

Müller, who as governing mayor is premier of the state of Berlin, told the Sunday edition of German newspaper “Bild” that Turkish officials had approached him following the attempted coup last month.

“I was approached and asked by a Turkish government official whether we would be prepared to critically confront the Gulen movement in Berlin and, if necessary, to support measures against it,” Müller told the newspaper.

“I rejected the idea and made it very clear that Turkish conflicts could not be waged in our city,” he added.

In Germany, businesses thought to be in support of Gulen have been harrassed by Erdogan supporters. In late July, the western city of Cologne was the scene of a massive demonstration in support of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Crackdown continues

Erdogan blames the July coup attempt on US-based cleric Fethullah Gulen, who has adamantly denied the claims. On Friday, Gulen penned an editorial in French newspaper “Le Monde,” calling on Erdogan to produce evidence of his guilt.

Meanwhile, in Turkey, Erdogan has purged tens of thousands of academics, journalists, civil servants and military personnel he suspects of supporting Gulen.

Erdogan has also repeatedly called on the US to extradict the cleric.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Berlin, coup, Gulen, Turkey

Armenophobia, Jewish phobia flaring up in Turkey, Is Gulen an Armenian?

August 12, 2016 By administrator

is-gulen-armenianBy Pinar Tremblay Columnist  Al-Monitor,

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has repeatedly told the world and his people that the words “Islam” and “terrorism” should not be used together, because Muslims cannot be terrorists. Indeed, Erdogan has insisted that students who attend Turkey’s religious imam hatip high schools would never become terrorists. Yet the man Erdogan accuses of masterminding the July 15 coup attempt is none other than the president’s former close friend and ally, Fethullah Gulen, a Sunni imam. This has made the situation rather uncomfortable for the president and the Justice and Development Party (AKP) government. Acknowledging that Muslims might deliberately hurt and even murder other Muslims is not easy in general for the majority of Turks, so what can be done to address this uncomfortable reality?

The easiest solution would be to resuscitate an answer that Turks have used in the past — that is, declare the enemy to be non-Muslim and foreign. In this case, the Armenian has once again emerged as the imagined culprit, invoked to help Turks assuage their troubled conscience.

Thus, several pro-government figures have concocted allegations to christen Gulen an Armenian. Such accusations were voiced prior to July 15, but have since been embellished. For example, on June 6, the pro-AKP Ottoman Clubs (Osmanli Ocaklari) proclaimed Gulen an Armenian, citing branches in his family tree and his background. Others claimed that the so-called Fethullah Gulen Terror Organization, a term Ankara uses to refer to Gulen followers, was influential in the German parliament’s June 2 decision to recognize the Armenian genocide.

At a pro-democracy rally held July 19, Kocaeli Buyuksehir Mayor Ibrahim Karaosmanoglu told attendees, “The fact that they [Gulenists] have infiltrated several key positions in the bureaucracy is a shame for us. They cannot be [trusted to be] teachers. They cannot be anything. … They hide themselves so well, they can even trade their honor to reach a key position.”

Indeed, various figures, including the professed historian Kadir Misiroglu, have alleged that Gulen’s father is Armenian and his mother is Jewish. Misiroglu also claims that Gulen belongs to a community in which Jews have (somehow) become Armenians. Ultra-nationalist figures have also contributed their share of such allegations.

In addition, numerous newspaper opinion pieces continue to warn dubiously against the Gulen movement. For example, Yeni Soz columnist Can Kemal Ozer wrote, “Gulen’s mother is a Jew, and [his] father an Armenian. He is the devil, who was brought up to seek revenge upon our people. He is not a Muslim, but a member of the Vatican Council.” Another columnist made mention of a few terror organizations, including the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), and argued that they are “Armenian establishments.”

As these articles and others began circulating on social media, a few lone voices struggled to stand up against such hate speech. One anonymous person tweeted, “[To claim] Gulen as Armenian is not a nuance or observation. It is the foundation of a process known as elimination and extermination.”

While watching the largest rally in Turkish history at Yenikapi, Istanbul, on Aug. 8, several observers tweeted about the deep-rooted xenophobia oozing from the rhetoric of the country’s political leaders. One tweet, with a photo of religious leaders attending the Yenikapi rally, observed, “It is as if we have invited these men [in the photo] to offend them.” Nationalist Action Party leader Devlet Bahceli referred to those deemed to be the (non-Muslim) enemy and a threat to Turkey as “Byzantine seeds.” Prime Minister Binali Yildirim resorted to “crusaders’ army,” and Erdogan described them as a “flock of infidels.”

The worrisome part is not only that Turkish leaders freely utter such hateful rhetoric, but that it has become normal in contemporary Turkey to do so. As abhorrent phrases filled the air, millions cheered in Yenikapi, and only a handful even realized the offense. Amid this feverishness, one must, however, ask, how could Armenians be culprits in the crimes for which an Islamist group, the Gulenists, has been accused?

Murat Bebiroglu, a senior editor of the Armenian online publication HyeTert, told Al-Monitor, “Starting in 1878, the image of the Armenian community in Anatolia switched from a nation of trust to a nation of [a slur]. That is, if you want to belittle someone, you call them Armenian. If you want to badmouth someone, call them Armenian.

“In a society where 99% [of the population] is said to be Muslim, it is seen as better to target your anger at 40,000-50,000 people rather than a larger group. Remember, when the PKK leader was caught, he was declared Armenian, [and] whenever PKK terror spikes, different papers start Armenian bashing. Whenever the going gets tough, Armenians become the easy and readily available target.”

Bebiroglu, a member of the dwindling Armenian community in Turkey, clings to black humor. He remarked, “In a sense, we were relieved when we heard several commentators also claim that Gulen is Jewish, not just Armenian. Could there be a worse image in the eyes of Turkish society than being not only Armenian, but also Jewish? The sad part is these allegations are accepted by a significant portion of the society and fuel further hatred against the minorities.”

So a sobering question remains: If you are not a Muslim, can you still be a Turk? The answer seems to be that in the view of some, anyone who is not a Muslim is a potential threat to society.

Turkey has recently suffered from simultaneous attacks at the hands of the PKK and the Islamic State and allegedly the Gulenists, the latter two of which are openly Islamic entities. Pro-government pundits are spinning their wheels to find ways to undermine support for these groups. They still lack the means, however, to explain how strains of Islam can threaten society, so they take the easy way out by fanning the flames of xenophobia. In the short term, Armenophobia becomes a valuable accomplice.

Without accepting full responsibility for its role in the expansion of the Gulenist movement in Turkey, and without acknowledging the organization’s Islamic outreach at home and abroad, can the Turkish government truly take on the Gulenists?

As convoluted as allegations that Gulen is Armenian might be, they are also quite scary when combined with the suggestion that the state and society will be wiped clean of all Gulenists. Turkish policymakers should surely recall from history the failures when states have tried to ensure domestic security by demonizing segments of society. The hateful rhetoric invoking Armenians — or any group unrelated to the Gulenists — will inevitably become the most difficult obstacle in the battle against curbing the Gulenists’ strength.

Read more: http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2016/08/turkey-is-fethullah-gulen-armenian.html#ixzz4H9YiRSZL

Pinar Tremblay is a columnist for Al-Monitor’s Turkey Pulse and a visiting scholar of political science at California State Polytechnic University, Pomona. She is a columnist for Turkish news outlet T24. Her articles have appeared in Time, New

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: armenophobia, Gulen, Turkey

US to send delegation to Turkey over Gülen extradition “Video”

August 6, 2016 By administrator

Gulen turkey usThe US Justice Department will send a technical delegation to Turkey next week over the government’s request to extradite US-based Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen, the prime suspect behind the July 15 coup attempt according to Ankara.

The Turkish Justice Ministry had invited a delegation from Washington to come to Turkey first to discuss Gülen’s extradition.

In return, a delegation from the Justice ministry will later depart for US to discuss the extradition after the US delegation’s visit, Hurriyet Daily News reported.

Ankara has already lodged two extradition demands with the US for Gülen, who lives a self-claimed exile in Pennsylvania.

Earlier this week, a second document had been sent to the United States demanding the urgent arrest of Gülen.

The U.S. Department of State announced on Aug. 5 that it was evaluating new documents sent by Ankara.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Erdogan, extradition, Gulen, Turkey, u.s.a

Turkish-Backed Schools In Pakistan Face Potential Closure

August 4, 2016 By administrator

Gulen schoolsThe blowback from a failed coup attempt in Turkey last month has reached all the way to Pakistan. The Turkish government is asking the South Asian country to close Institutions linked to Fethullah Gulen, the man they claim was behind the coup. Parents and students of about two dozen schools are worried about what may happen to them. VOA’s Ayesha Tanzeem reports from Islamabad.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Gulen, Pakistan, Schools, Turkish-Backed

Turkey Says FBI and CIA Behind Failed Coup, Gulen ‘Only a Pawn’

July 31, 2016 By administrator

Turkish PMThe Erdogan regime continues to play with fire renewing accusations that the United States spearheaded a complex conspiracy to overthrow the Turkish government.

A Turkish prosecutor claims that the CIA and FBI provided training to followers of US-based Turkish cleric Fethullah Gulen, whom Ankara initially called the “mastermind” of the failed attempt to overthrow the Erdogan regime on July 15 that left hundreds dead and thousands more wounded.

An indictment, prepared by the Edirne Public Prosecutor’s office and submitted to the local Second Heavy Penal Court, seeks the harshest possible punishment for 43 suspected coup plotters. In the indictment, the prosecutors allege that members of “the Fethullah Terrorist Organization” (FETO) were trained by the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).

“The CIA and FBI provided training in several subjects to the cadre raised in the culture centers belonging to the Gulen movement,” read the indictment. “The operations carried out by prosecutors and security officials during the Dec. 17 process can be taken as a good example of this.” The “Dec. 17 process” refers to a high profile corruption probe that targeted senior government officials in 2013.

“The [failed coup] attempt aimed to weaken the state with all its institutions by getting rid of the government completely,” stated the document. “Those in the Gulen movement who work in the judicial and security institutions and who received the aforementioned training, took on the task and moved into action.”

The prosecutor’s claims were alluded to in part by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan who said Friday in response to criticism by US CENTCOM Commander four-star General Joseph Votel, “My people know who is behind this scheme… they know who the superior intelligence behind it is, and with these statements [condemning the post-coup purge] you are revealing yourselves, you are giving yourselves away.” The statement was interpreted as an accusation against US intelligence agencies.

On Saturday, the Turkish President continued the theme of subtle accusations calling US-based cleric Fethullah Gulen “a pawn” backed by a “mastermind” which has also been interpreted as suggesting that the US agencies supported the failed putsch.

US military and intelligence officials have been the target of scorn and accusation from Turkish leaders in the wake of the failed coup starting with the country’s Labor Minister who said on July 16 in an interview with HaberTurk that “the United States is behind the coup.”

These accusations were forcefully denounced by the State Department which called the claims “utterly false and harmful to our bilateral relations.” However, on July 17, Turkey’s Prime Minister Binali Yildirim said the country was ready to go to war with “any” country that backed Fethullah Gulen, viewed as a reference to America’s refusal to extradite the suspected coup leader.

These accusations have grown in recent weeks with Erdogan alleging that CENTCOM commander General Joseph Votel was siding with the coup plotters and with the country’s leading pro-Erdogan Islamist newspaper Yeni Safak printing a picture of American three-star General and commander of NATO’s International Security Assistance Forces (ISAF) John F. Campbell under the headline “The Man Behind the Failed Coup in Turkey.”

The result of the shocking allegations has been an emboldening of anti-American fervor in the country with over 5,000 protesters marching towards the Incirlik Air Base on Thursday chanting “death to the US” and demanding that the United States leave. That incident came on the heels of a massive fire near NATO’s Izmir base with officials suggesting the cause was “anti-American sabotage” as reported by Turkey’s T24 News.

On Saturday, 7000 armed police officers supported by heavy vehicles blocked all access to NATO’s Incirlik Air Base. Turkish newspaper Hurriyet reported that Adana Police received a tip of a brewing second coup attempt, but the country’s European Affairs Minister Omer Celik downplayed the sudden show of force calling it a “general security check” and asserting that “nothing is wrong.”

During the temporary blockade of the Incirlik Air Base, a group of several hundred anti-American protesters assembled near the scene chanting for the base to be shut down as confirmed by video accounts on the scene although some Western outlets have provided conflicting reports that the protesters preceded the blockade and that Turkish police were there to disperse the crowd.

Source: http://sputniknews.com/middleeast/20160731/1043813275/erdogan-turkey-purge-gulen-coup.html

Filed Under: News Tagged With: CIA, coup, FBI, Gulen, Turkey, U.S

Germany: Police in Cologne wary ahead of Turkey coup protests

July 29, 2016 By administrator

gulen-erdogan-germany“Do not import a domestic political conflict to the region where you have chosen to live,” Hannelore Kraft said.

Cologne police won’t rule out canceling a planned demonstration by supporters of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan if they cannot ensure public safety. Tensions have risen in Germany following Turkey’s failed coup.

In a press conference Friday, the police chief in the western German city of Cologne said they had estimated up 30,000 people, most of them Erdogan supporters, to take part in the rally scheduled for Sunday. The protest organizers, pro-Erdogan group the Union of European-Turkish Democrats (UETD) were expecting about 20,000 people. Several counter-demonstrations were also planned.

“We are expecting an atmosphere which is highly emotionally charged,” Cologne police chief Jürgen Mathies said.

About 2,300 police officers, including some who speak Turkish, are to be on duty.

German authorities have also demanded that the rally organizers provide them a list of the planned speakers amid reports senior Turkish politicians would be attending.

“We will constantly assess the situation. Should we come to the conclusion that public safety cannot be ensured, I will cancel the demonstration, even at short notice” Mathies added, warning that police would intervene against any kind of violence “quickly, decisively and forcefully.”

‘Don’t import conflict’

Some three million people of Turkish heritage live in Germany, the world’s largest Turkish diaspora. About half of those are eligible to vote in Turkish elections and in the latest vote the AKP party founded by Erdogan gained 60 percent, a bigger share than in Turkey. Following the failed coup and the series of purges in its aftermath – including a call from Ankara for Germany to hand over alleged supporters of accused coup-plotter Fethullah Gulen – concern that the tensions will play out on German soil has increased.

The state premier of North Rhine-Westphalia, where Cologne is situated, urged Turkish residents to show restraint.

“Do not import a domestic political conflict to the region where you have chosen to live,” Hannelore Kraft said.

Counter-demonstrations

The planned counter-demonstrations included those organized by the far-right party Pro NRW and the group HoGeSa (Hooligans against Salafists). A demonstration called “stop Erdogan” for “democracy and human rights in Turkey” has been organized by the youth wings four German political parties: the Greens, Social Democrats, the Left party and the Free Democrats.

Source: http://www.dw.com/en/police-in-cologne-wary-ahead-of-turkey-coup-protests/a-19437244

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Erdogan, Germany, Gulen

Erdogan Hints at Executing 13,000, Exits European Human Rights Convention

July 24, 2016 By administrator

wikileaks-turkeyTurkish authorities have arrested more than 13,000 people believed to be tied to the coup attempt and have gutted the country’s civil services sector suspending over 60,000 educators, judges and police.

“‘Why should I keep them and feed them in prisons for years to come?’ – that’s what the people say,” said Erdogan. “The people now have the idea, after so many terrorist incidents, that these terrorists should be killed, that’s where they are, they don’t see any other outcome to it.”

In the wake of the coup, the Erdogan government immediately withdrew from the jurisdiction of the European Court of Human Rights, which bans executions, raising the likelihood of mass executions.

Erdogan’s Turkey now finds itself in a state of disrepair in the wake of a failed coup attempt that left at least 246 dead and more than 2,000 injured as the country’s president called his people to go into the streets and clash with the military forces attempting to overthrow the government. The coup forces, which labelled themselves a Peace Council, opened fire on civilians with helicopters, tanks, and automatic rifles.

Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim said on Saturday authorities had imprisoned over 13,000 people on accusations of treason, including 8,831 soldiers and 2,745 judges – 36% of the entire Turkish judiciary.

“The cleansing is continuing, and we remain very determined,” President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said in a speech late Wednesday describing opposition as a “virus” within the Turkish military and state institutions that had spread like “cancer.”

Many worry that the government’s dragnet has extended well beyond those who could have been connected to the botched coup plot or even sympathizers to the cause in light of President Erdogan’s move in June to pass a constitutional amendment revoking legislative immunity for Kurdish opposition lawmakers from the HDP. Erdogan also successfully pushed to expand the country’s “terrorist” laws to extend to virtually any opposition member deemed by decree. 

Erdogan has proven to have a tenuous grasp of the notion of civil liberties and democracy cracking down with wanton fury against opposition journalists and, in fact, criminalizing nearly all forms of opposition to his government. Still many wonder whether the increasingly autocratic Turkish government is willing to execute thousands which would all but forever exclude the country from the European Union and NATO limiting Erdogan’s level of influence on the international stage.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: executing, exits, Gulen, Human Right, Turkey

Turkey Detains Top Aide to US-Based ‘Coup Mastermind

July 23, 2016 By administrator

gulen-nTurkish authorities detained the “right hand” of US-based Turkish cleric Fethullah Gulen, who President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has accused of masterminding the failed coup attempt, said a spokesperson for President Erdogan.

The post-coup attempt purge against Recep Tayyip Erdogan that left hundreds dead and Turkish civil society in disarray amid growing crackdowns resulting in the arrests of over 10,000 purported loyalists of US-based cleric Fethullah Gulen has reached a critical stage with an official deemed to be the adversary’s right-hand man being arrested by Turkish officials.

Halis Hanci, described as cleric Fethullah Gulen’s right-hand man, apparently entered Turkey two days before the abortive coup, Turkish presidential officials stated. 

Hanci was arrested in Trabzon’s arakli district, according to Turkish local news.

Earlier Saturday, Muhammet Sait Gulen, Fettulah Gulen’s nephew, was also arrested on the orders of the chief prosecutor of Ankara.

Fethullah Gulen denies any involvement in the failed coup attempt saying that he was “insulted” by the accusation in light of his own experience living through government overthrow bids. Instead, he accuses Turkish President Erdogan of staging the coup as an act of theater in order to garner more control over the people of Turkey.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Arrest, Gulen, Turkey

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